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2026 | 64 | 263-274

Article title

Assessment of Soil Degradation in Rice (Oryza sativa L) Fields under Intensive Cultivation in Kura, Kano State, Nigeria

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Soil degradation is a major threat to the sustainability of irrigated rice production in Nigeria. This study assessed the status of soils under intensive rice cultivation in Kura LGA, Kano State, by analyzing physical, chemical, and micronutrient properties from 20 composite samples (0–20 cm depth). Soil pH, electrical conductivity, organic carbon, total nitrogen, available phosphorus, exchangeable bases, and micronutrients, were analyzed to access degradation severity, while a degradation index was applied to classify severity. Results showed that soils were moderately acidic to neutral (pH 5.9-7.1) with low organic carbon (< 1%) and nitrogen (< 0.1%), indicating nutrient depletion. Micronutrients such as Cu and Zn were below critical thresholds in several locations, while high Fe (>300 mg/kg) suggested potential imbalance. Overall, 55% of sampled fields showed moderate degradation and 15% severe degradation, mainly due to nutrient mining, poor organic matter management, and salinity risks from irrigation. The findings highlight the urgent need for integrated soil fertility management, including organic amendments, micronutrient supplementation, and conservation tillage, to sustain rice productivity in the Kano River Irrigation Project area. This study delivers the first ward-level insight into soil degradation in Kura LGA, revealing spatial variability and critical nutrient threshold that inform targeted strategies to sustain rice productivity under intensive cultivation.

Discipline

Year

Volume

64

Pages

263-274

Physical description

Contributors

  • Department of Soil Science, Bayero University, Kano, Kano State, Nigeria
  • Department of Soil Science, Bayero University, Kano, Kano State, Nigeria
  • Department of Agronomy, Bayero University, Kano, Kano State, Nigeria

References

  • [1] Blanco-Canqui, H., & Lal, R. (2022). Soil and water conservation: Principles, policy, and practices (3rd ed.). CRC Press.
  • [2] Bray, R. H., & Kurtz, L. T. (1945). Determination of total, organic, and available forms of phosphorus in soils. Soil Science, 59(1), 39-46
  • [3] Bremner, J. M., & Mulvaney, C. S. (1982). Nitrogen-total. In A. L. Page (Ed.), Methods of soil analysis, Part 2: Chemical and microbiological properties (pp. 595–624). Soil Science Society of America.
  • [4] Gee, G. W., & Or, D. (2002). Particle-size analysis. In J. H. Dane & G. C. Topp (Eds.), Methods of soil analysis, Part 4: Physical methods (pp. 255–293). Soil Science Society of America.
  • [5] Issa, F. O., Sani, R. M., Mohammed, A., Umar, S. A., & Ndagi, I. (2021). Analysis of agrochemical marketing in Kura Local Government Area of Kano State, Nigeria. Nigerian Journal of Agricultural Economics, 11(1), 50–61
  • [6] Jibrin, J. M., Abubakar, S. Z., & Suleiman, A. (2008). Soil fertility status of the Kano River Irrigation Project area in the Sudan savannah of Nigeria. Journal of Applied Sciences, 8(4), 692–696. https://doi.org/10.3923/jas.2008.692.696
  • [7] Khallah, Y. I., Aliyu, M. A., Musa, A. S., & Muhammad, B. (2025). Spatial and geostatistical analysis of variability of soil exchangeable basic cations along River Wudil flood plain, Kano State, Nigeria. Sahel Journal of Life Sciences, 3(2), 239–250.
  • [8] Mesele, S. A., Ajiboye, G. A., & Talbot, J. (2024). Edaphic factors modulating phosphorus availability in lowland rice systems, Nigeria. Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis, 55(19), 2935–2951. https://doi.org/10.1080/00103624.2024.2379593
  • [9] Nelson, D. W., & Sommers, L. E. (1996). Total carbon, organic carbon, and organic matter. In D. L. Sparks (Ed.), Methods of soil analysis, Part 3: Chemical methods (pp. 961–1010). Soil Science Society of America.
  • [10] Oni, O. E., Adeyemi, N., Osunleti, S., Ologunde, O., & Fagoroye, A. (2024). Interaction effects of nitrogen, phosphorus, and zinc fertilization on growth, yield, and nutrient contents of lowland rice varieties. Agricultura, 129(1–2), 45–56. https://doi.org/10.15835/agr.v129i1-2.14893
  • [11] Shahid, S. A., Zaman, M., & Heng, L. (Eds.). (2018). Soil salinity assessment: Methods, applications, and management. Springer.
  • [12] Snakin, V. V., Krechetov, P. P., Kuzovnikova, T. A., Alyabina, I. O., Gurov, A. F., & Stepichev, A. V. (1996). The system of assessment of soil degradation. Soil Technology, 8(4), 331–343
  • [13] Sule, S. U., Umar, S. A., Danlami, A., & Mansur, A. I. (2025). Comparative assessment of soil fertility in irrigated and rainfed farmlands using exchangeable cations and cation exchange capacity in Kura, Kano State. UMYU Scientifica, 4(1), 445–451. https://doi.org/10.56919/usci.2541.044
  • [14] Wahab, A. A., Yusuf, O. J., Nofiu, T. T., Olowoake, A. A., & Yaman, I. U. (2024). Spatial soil variability and precision management strategies for optimizing maize productivity in Kwara State, Nigeria. Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources Journal, 3(2), 368–377
  • [15] Yau, H. A. (2025). Soil degradation assessment in selected land uses in Kumbotso LGA, Kano State. Journal of Agricultural and Allied Technologies, 2(1), 78–89.
  • [16] Ye, C., Guo, X., Zhang, L., Zhang, R., Xu, W., Xu, Z., & Li, Y. (2024). Effect of soil texture on soil nutrient status and rice nutrient absorption in paddy soils. Agronomy, 14(6), 1339. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy14061339

Document Type

article

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.psjd-7c69ca8c-e4dc-44b9-bad7-0b8fdc617f34
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