A study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of Costa Rica

The above data have shown more variation between samples that had different parent material than between the overall averages of the two coffee regions. Nevertheless, the averages for the east central region were lower than the averages for the San José region in all properties except total nitrogen. Within the east central region, the soil samples from the old and young volcanic soils had the highest level of total nitrogen, moisture equivalent and also high base exchange capacities. On the other hand, the soil samples from the alluvial group had the lowest levels for the properties mentioned. Samples from the other groups were intermediate between these two. A very close interrelationship of the properties mentioned above has been seen. There also seemed to be a direct relationship between pH, per cent of base saturation, and total replaceable bases. The soil samples that had the lowest pH values, had the lowest per cent of base saturation, the lowest levels of total replaceable bases and the lowest averages of replaceable calcium. The converse also appeared to be the case The correlations summarized in Table 22 confirm these relationships. The coffee soil correlations were stronger than the cocoa soil correlations and significant relationships were found for the subsoil as well on the surface soil.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 115842 Sands, F.B., 6431 Cornell Univ. (EUA). Graduate School
Format: biblioteca
Published: (EUA) 1954
Subjects:ZONAS CACAOTERAS, ZONAS CAFETERAS, SUELO, MUESTREO, FERTILIDAD DEL SUELO, COSTA RICA,
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id KOHA-OAI-BVE:71814
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:718142020-02-07T06:33:50ZA study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of Costa Rica 115842 Sands, F.B. 6431 Cornell Univ. (EUA). Graduate School (EUA)1954The above data have shown more variation between samples that had different parent material than between the overall averages of the two coffee regions. Nevertheless, the averages for the east central region were lower than the averages for the San José region in all properties except total nitrogen. Within the east central region, the soil samples from the old and young volcanic soils had the highest level of total nitrogen, moisture equivalent and also high base exchange capacities. On the other hand, the soil samples from the alluvial group had the lowest levels for the properties mentioned. Samples from the other groups were intermediate between these two. A very close interrelationship of the properties mentioned above has been seen. There also seemed to be a direct relationship between pH, per cent of base saturation, and total replaceable bases. The soil samples that had the lowest pH values, had the lowest per cent of base saturation, the lowest levels of total replaceable bases and the lowest averages of replaceable calcium. The converse also appeared to be the case The correlations summarized in Table 22 confirm these relationships. The coffee soil correlations were stronger than the cocoa soil correlations and significant relationships were found for the subsoil as well on the surface soil.Tesis (Ph D)The above data have shown more variation between samples that had different parent material than between the overall averages of the two coffee regions. Nevertheless, the averages for the east central region were lower than the averages for the San José region in all properties except total nitrogen. Within the east central region, the soil samples from the old and young volcanic soils had the highest level of total nitrogen, moisture equivalent and also high base exchange capacities. On the other hand, the soil samples from the alluvial group had the lowest levels for the properties mentioned. Samples from the other groups were intermediate between these two. A very close interrelationship of the properties mentioned above has been seen. There also seemed to be a direct relationship between pH, per cent of base saturation, and total replaceable bases. The soil samples that had the lowest pH values, had the lowest per cent of base saturation, the lowest levels of total replaceable bases and the lowest averages of replaceable calcium. The converse also appeared to be the case The correlations summarized in Table 22 confirm these relationships. The coffee soil correlations were stronger than the cocoa soil correlations and significant relationships were found for the subsoil as well on the surface soil.ZONAS CACAOTERASZONAS CAFETERASSUELOMUESTREOFERTILIDAD DEL SUELOCOSTA RICA
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic ZONAS CACAOTERAS
ZONAS CAFETERAS
SUELO
MUESTREO
FERTILIDAD DEL SUELO
COSTA RICA
ZONAS CACAOTERAS
ZONAS CAFETERAS
SUELO
MUESTREO
FERTILIDAD DEL SUELO
COSTA RICA
spellingShingle ZONAS CACAOTERAS
ZONAS CAFETERAS
SUELO
MUESTREO
FERTILIDAD DEL SUELO
COSTA RICA
ZONAS CACAOTERAS
ZONAS CAFETERAS
SUELO
MUESTREO
FERTILIDAD DEL SUELO
COSTA RICA
115842 Sands, F.B.
6431 Cornell Univ. (EUA). Graduate School
A study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of Costa Rica
description The above data have shown more variation between samples that had different parent material than between the overall averages of the two coffee regions. Nevertheless, the averages for the east central region were lower than the averages for the San José region in all properties except total nitrogen. Within the east central region, the soil samples from the old and young volcanic soils had the highest level of total nitrogen, moisture equivalent and also high base exchange capacities. On the other hand, the soil samples from the alluvial group had the lowest levels for the properties mentioned. Samples from the other groups were intermediate between these two. A very close interrelationship of the properties mentioned above has been seen. There also seemed to be a direct relationship between pH, per cent of base saturation, and total replaceable bases. The soil samples that had the lowest pH values, had the lowest per cent of base saturation, the lowest levels of total replaceable bases and the lowest averages of replaceable calcium. The converse also appeared to be the case The correlations summarized in Table 22 confirm these relationships. The coffee soil correlations were stronger than the cocoa soil correlations and significant relationships were found for the subsoil as well on the surface soil.
format
topic_facet ZONAS CACAOTERAS
ZONAS CAFETERAS
SUELO
MUESTREO
FERTILIDAD DEL SUELO
COSTA RICA
author 115842 Sands, F.B.
6431 Cornell Univ. (EUA). Graduate School
author_facet 115842 Sands, F.B.
6431 Cornell Univ. (EUA). Graduate School
author_sort 115842 Sands, F.B.
title A study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of Costa Rica
title_short A study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of Costa Rica
title_full A study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of Costa Rica
title_fullStr A study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of Costa Rica
title_full_unstemmed A study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of Costa Rica
title_sort study of the fertility status of the cocoa and coffee soils of costa rica
publisher (EUA)
publishDate 1954
work_keys_str_mv AT 115842sandsfb astudyofthefertilitystatusofthecocoaandcoffeesoilsofcostarica
AT 6431cornelluniveuagraduateschool astudyofthefertilitystatusofthecocoaandcoffeesoilsofcostarica
AT 115842sandsfb studyofthefertilitystatusofthecocoaandcoffeesoilsofcostarica
AT 6431cornelluniveuagraduateschool studyofthefertilitystatusofthecocoaandcoffeesoilsofcostarica
_version_ 1756057568132726785