Venuste Nsengimana, Jean dD Nsenganeza, Thacien Hagenimana, and Wouter Dekoninck (2023)
Impact of chemical fertilizers on diversity and abundance of soil-litter arthropod communities in coffee and banana plantations in southern Rwanda
Current Research in Environmental Sustainability , 5(2023)( 100215):1-9.
Few studies explored effects of chemical fertilizers on diversity and abundance of soillitter arthropods in the
tropics. To fill this gap, a study focussed on the abundance of soil-litter arthropods and selected soil physicochemical properties in coffee plantations treated with chemical fertilizers and in plantations of coffee and banana
treated with organic fertilizers and organic mulches in southern Rwanda. Each land use was replicated three
times. Soil-litter arthropods were collected using pitfall traps and hand collection. They were identified to the
family level using dichotomous keys. Soil have been collected using auger and taken to the laboratory for the
analysis of soil pH, soil organic carbon, total nitrogen, phosphorus, and cation exchange capacity. Findings
indicated a total of 12,945 individuals distributed into 3 classes, 16 orders, 50 families and 92 morphospecies,
with higher abundance and diversity in coffee plantations treated with organic fertilizers and organic mulches.
Collected soil-litter arthropods were mainly classified in the class Insecta, dominated in numbers by ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), while Coleoptera and Hemiptera had more families. However, soil under coffee plantations treated with organic fertilizers and organic mulches was acidic compared with the soil under coffee
plantations treated with inorganic fertilizers and banana plantations treated with organic fertilizers and organic
mulches. The relationships between soil-litter arthropods and soil physicochemical properties suggest that soillitter arthropods respond to the land use independently from soil physicochemical properties. We recommend
further studies in coffee and other crop plantations in other regions of Rwanda to verify the findings of this study.
PDF available, Open Access, Impact Factor, RBINS Collection(s)
Fertilizer, Coffee, Banana, Arthropod, Diversity, Organic mulches
- DOI: 10.1016/j.crsust.2023.100215
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