Critical leaf nutrient concentrations have often been used to diagnose the nutritional causes of crop underperformance. Unfortunately, these diagnostic criteria are not available for mature, tuber-bearing sweet potato plants (the word 'tuber' being used to describe a swollen root rather than a swollen stem).
Sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) is the staple food crop in the highlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG). Declining crop productivity, however, appears to be threatening the sustainability of sweet potato-based farming systems within the region, a probable cause being the exhaustion of soil nutrient reserves in continuously cultivated sweet potato gardens. To assess the extent of the problem, a survey of sweet potato gardens was conducted across four of the highlands provinces and information on soil and crop variables was obtained for old gardens (cultivated over many seasons) and new gardens (newly brought into cultivation) on soils of volcanic and non-volcanic origin. Crop leaf nutrient data collected in the survey were interpreted using the Diagnosis and Recommendation Integrated System (DRIS), to try to identify the main nutritional constraints on tuber production in different garden types on soils of volcanic or nonvolcanic origin. The results suggested that K deficiency was the primary cause of poor crop production in almost a third of sweet potato gardens, but was more of a problem in old gardens than in new. Phosphorus deficiency was also a problem on volcanic soils, and S deficiency on non-volcanic soils. These latter deficiencies, however, were at least as prevalent in new gardens as in old. Important factors contributing to K and S depletion from garden systems were the removal of K and S-rich vines from cultivation areas, the shortening of fallow periods and the burning of weed and crop residues, the latter releasing S (SO 2 ) to the atmosphere.
The fertility of farmed soils in parts of the Papua New Guinea (PNG) highlands reputedly has been declining for some time owing to population pressure. To assess the extent of the problem, a survey of sweet potato gardens was conducted across four of the highlands provinces and information on soil variables was obtained for gardens on soils of volcanic and non-volcanic origins. In the absence of fertilizer application, soil fertility in the humid tropics is largely a function of soil cation exchange capacity (CEC), and soils of low CEC had previously been reported in this region. In the present study, relationships between effective CEC (ECEC) and other soil properties in moderately acidic soils (pH 5.5-6.3) were investigated to see if there was scope for improving soil cation retention characteristics through management of key soil variables. For volcanic soils of varying allophane content, ECEC was, unexpectedly, negatively correlated with soil C and soil C ⁄ N, most probably because of the formation of humus-allophane complexes which had facilitated organic matter accumulation whilst dramatically reducing the free negative charges on the material. Given the latter outcome, the indigenous practice of heaping compost in the centre of soil mounds appeared to be one of the best strategies for circumventing the problem of low CEC, as nutrients in the compost are held in an environment virtually independent of the surrounding soil mineralogy. Although the positive correlation between soil pH and soil ECEC was weak for volcanic soils, it was concluded that liming might nevertheless be an effective means of enhancing the nutrient retention characteristics of these soils provided the practicalities and costs were not prohibitive.
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