Purpose The study evaluated dried manures and manure ashes as alternative products from animal manures, and determined the dynamics of soil nitrogen availability indices and organic carbon release in some soils amended with dried manures and ashes under laboratory incubation, screen-house and field experiments. Methods Cattle, goat and poultry manures were collected and air dried to produce dried manures after which part of the dried manures were burnt in open space at a temperature range of 320-450 °C to produce manure ashes. Treatments which were no amendment (control), dried manures of cattle, goat and poultry manure ashes of cattle, goat and poultry and NPK 15-15-15 at 120 kg N ha −1 were applied to soil. Samples were taken fortnightly after amendment incorporation in the incubation experiment; in screen-house experiment and field experiments, plant seeds were established after amendment incorporation; thereafter, soil samples were taken fortnightly. Soil samples were analyzed for soil organic carbon (SOC), NH 4 +-N and NO 3 −-N using a spectrophotometer. Results Incineration of manures increased pH, exchangeable cations and carbon, while nitrogen in manures ashes was comparable to nitrogen in dried manures. The application of manure ash increased SOC, NH 4 +-N and NO 3 −-N by 182, 102, 128% in incubation experiment while 64 and 628% increase in SOC and NH 4 +-N was recorded in screen-house experiment, respectively, relative to the control. In the field experiment, a significant increase in NO 3 −-N was recorded at the onset of incorporation; nitrification was more pronounced than ammonification under incubation and field conditions. Conclusion Dried manures are not superior to manure ashes and incorporation of manures ashes increased the SOC, NH 4 +-N and NO 3 −-N though changes with increasing weeks were erratic.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.