Growth Responses of Acacia mangium and Paraserianthes falcataria Seedlings on Different Soil Origin under Nursery Condition

The objective of the present study was to examine the growth responses of Acacia mangium (mangium) and Paraserianthes falcataria (sengon) seedlings growing on different soil origin under nursery condition. This study was started in September 2012 and terminated in March 2013.  The seedlings were gro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tirtha Ayu Paramitha, Djumali Mardji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Syiah Kuala University 2015-12-01
Series:Aceh International Journal of Science and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jurnal.unsyiah.ac.id/AIJST/article/view/3328
id doaj-5d0d96ef967946b69fa760d8764d95b6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5d0d96ef967946b69fa760d8764d95b62020-11-24T23:44:09ZengSyiah Kuala UniversityAceh International Journal of Science and Technology2088-98602015-12-014310.13170/aijst.4.3.33283012Growth Responses of Acacia mangium and Paraserianthes falcataria Seedlings on Different Soil Origin under Nursery ConditionTirtha Ayu Paramitha0Djumali Mardji1Faculty of Agriculture, Muhammadiyah University, Jl. Hang Tuah No 29, Palu 94118, West SulawesiFaculty of Forestry, Mulawarman University, Campus Gunung Kelua, Samarinda 75123, East Kalimantan, Indonesia.The objective of the present study was to examine the growth responses of Acacia mangium (mangium) and Paraserianthes falcataria (sengon) seedlings growing on different soil origin under nursery condition. This study was started in September 2012 and terminated in March 2013.  The seedlings were grown from seeds sown in a plastic box filled with sterilized sands. One week after sowing, the seedlings were transplanted into polybags contained sterilized soils originated from secondary forest, Imperata cylindrica grassland and ex-coal mining. The number of all seedlings were 180 seedlings consisted of 3 different soils, 2 species of seedlings with 10 seedlings replicated 3 times. Assessment was conducted one week after transplanting, then subsequently monitored every 2 weeks, except dry weighing and counting nodules were performed at the end of the study. A completely randomized design was used in this study. The data was analyzed using Costat software. The study resulted that the different of soil origin influenced on all growth variables of mangium and sengon of 4.5 months old. The survival rate of seedlings, height and diameter increments, dry weight and root nodules were better in both species of seedlings growing on soil originated from secondary forest and Imperata grassland compared with the soil from ex-coal mining. But the survival rates of sengon seedlings were higher than that of mangium on these three soils. The highest dry weight of sengon seedlings was achieved on soil originated from secondary forest. In the present study, soil originated from secondary forest increased more in weight of shoot than root, so that the shoot-root ratio was unbalanced more than one. Based on the results of this study, it is recommended that soil from secondary forest and Imperata grassland can be used as growing media for mangium and sengon seedlings in the nursery.http://jurnal.unsyiah.ac.id/AIJST/article/view/3328MangiumSengonSecondary forestGrasslandEx-coal miningNursery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tirtha Ayu Paramitha
Djumali Mardji
spellingShingle Tirtha Ayu Paramitha
Djumali Mardji
Growth Responses of Acacia mangium and Paraserianthes falcataria Seedlings on Different Soil Origin under Nursery Condition
Aceh International Journal of Science and Technology
Mangium
Sengon
Secondary forest
Grassland
Ex-coal mining
Nursery
author_facet Tirtha Ayu Paramitha
Djumali Mardji
author_sort Tirtha Ayu Paramitha
title Growth Responses of Acacia mangium and Paraserianthes falcataria Seedlings on Different Soil Origin under Nursery Condition
title_short Growth Responses of Acacia mangium and Paraserianthes falcataria Seedlings on Different Soil Origin under Nursery Condition
title_full Growth Responses of Acacia mangium and Paraserianthes falcataria Seedlings on Different Soil Origin under Nursery Condition
title_fullStr Growth Responses of Acacia mangium and Paraserianthes falcataria Seedlings on Different Soil Origin under Nursery Condition
title_full_unstemmed Growth Responses of Acacia mangium and Paraserianthes falcataria Seedlings on Different Soil Origin under Nursery Condition
title_sort growth responses of acacia mangium and paraserianthes falcataria seedlings on different soil origin under nursery condition
publisher Syiah Kuala University
series Aceh International Journal of Science and Technology
issn 2088-9860
publishDate 2015-12-01
description The objective of the present study was to examine the growth responses of Acacia mangium (mangium) and Paraserianthes falcataria (sengon) seedlings growing on different soil origin under nursery condition. This study was started in September 2012 and terminated in March 2013.  The seedlings were grown from seeds sown in a plastic box filled with sterilized sands. One week after sowing, the seedlings were transplanted into polybags contained sterilized soils originated from secondary forest, Imperata cylindrica grassland and ex-coal mining. The number of all seedlings were 180 seedlings consisted of 3 different soils, 2 species of seedlings with 10 seedlings replicated 3 times. Assessment was conducted one week after transplanting, then subsequently monitored every 2 weeks, except dry weighing and counting nodules were performed at the end of the study. A completely randomized design was used in this study. The data was analyzed using Costat software. The study resulted that the different of soil origin influenced on all growth variables of mangium and sengon of 4.5 months old. The survival rate of seedlings, height and diameter increments, dry weight and root nodules were better in both species of seedlings growing on soil originated from secondary forest and Imperata grassland compared with the soil from ex-coal mining. But the survival rates of sengon seedlings were higher than that of mangium on these three soils. The highest dry weight of sengon seedlings was achieved on soil originated from secondary forest. In the present study, soil originated from secondary forest increased more in weight of shoot than root, so that the shoot-root ratio was unbalanced more than one. Based on the results of this study, it is recommended that soil from secondary forest and Imperata grassland can be used as growing media for mangium and sengon seedlings in the nursery.
topic Mangium
Sengon
Secondary forest
Grassland
Ex-coal mining
Nursery
url http://jurnal.unsyiah.ac.id/AIJST/article/view/3328
work_keys_str_mv AT tirthaayuparamitha growthresponsesofacaciamangiumandparaserianthesfalcatariaseedlingsondifferentsoiloriginundernurserycondition
AT djumalimardji growthresponsesofacaciamangiumandparaserianthesfalcatariaseedlingsondifferentsoiloriginundernurserycondition
_version_ 1725499911008419840