Salt's Chemical Makeup and Floral Composition

Authors

  • Atharav Bajpai Department of Pham. Science, NMAM Institute of Technology, Nitte, Udupi, INDIA.

Keywords:

Salt affected habitat, physico-chemical properties, floristic composition, soluble salts

Abstract

The three salt affected habitats near Sant Ravidas Nagar Bhadohi were characterized by a grass-dominated sparse vegetation with extensive deposition of salt during major part of the year. Species diversity was maximum during the rainy season, which undergoes simplification through elimination subsequent to increasing soil moisture stress. Low organic Matter, low nitrogen content, high pH and high ECe is characteristic feature of the soil. During rainy season decomposition and mineralization of organic matter were rapid which result in to high nitrogen content in the soil.

References

Birch H.F.; 1958. The effect of soil drying on humus decomposition and nitrogen availability. Plant and Soil, 10: 9-31.

Choudhri G.N. and Sharma B.A.;1975. Study of nitrogen dynamics in salt affected (Usar) habitat near Varanasi. Trop Ecol., 16:133-139.

Gupta B.N. and Rege, S.;1973. Reclaming salty soils. ICAR, Publ. New Delhi.

Jackson, M.C.;1962. Soil Chemical Analysis. Prentice Hall Inc. Engle Wood Cliffs, New Jersy, USA.

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Published

2022-08-31

How to Cite

Bajpai, A. (2022). Salt’s Chemical Makeup and Floral Composition. Stallion Journal for Multidisciplinary Associated Research Studies, 1(4), 14–16. Retrieved from https://sjmars.com/index.php/sjmars/article/view/20

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