Growth performance of selected grass species on coal-mine overburden dump slopes in India

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
B. B. Dhar S. K. Chaulya R. S. Singh
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
4
File Size:
2089 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 21, 1905

Abstract

Two prominent local species, Dendrocalmus strictus (bamboo) and Saccharum spontaneum (kashi), and two exotic species, Cymbopogon citratus (lemon grass) and Vetiveria zizanoides (vetiver), were selected for growth trials on dumps at Mandaman, Chora, Mudidih, South Balanda and Ghugus. The climate at these sites is dry tropical and the surface soil layer a slightly acid to neutral sandy to clayey loam 10-11 cm thick, impoverished in major plant nutrients. After two years bamboo had grown the most, up to 325 cm in height, and contributed the greatest biomass, 638 g/m2 of plant. The local kashi species had a very good regenerative capacity, which was lacking in the lemon grass and vetiver. The grasses had very good soil-binding capacity and could also provide income if used as cash crops
Citation

APA: B. B. Dhar S. K. Chaulya R. S. Singh  (1905)  Growth performance of selected grass species on coal-mine overburden dump slopes in India

MLA: B. B. Dhar S. K. Chaulya R. S. Singh Growth performance of selected grass species on coal-mine overburden dump slopes in India. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1905.

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