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The Utilization of Microbial Inoculants Based on Irradiated Compost in Dryland Remediation to Increase The Growth of King Grass and Maize
Author(s) -
Tri Retno Diah Larasati,
Nana Mulyana,
Dan Sudradjat
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
atom indonesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2356-5322
pISSN - 0126-1568
DOI - 10.17146/aij.2016.477
Subject(s) - microbial inoculant , compost , agronomy , dry weight , environmental remediation , environmental science , biology , horticulture , inoculation , contamination , ecology
This research was conducted to evaluate the capability of functional microbial inoculants to remediate drylands. The microbial inoculants used consist of hydrocarbon-degrading microbial inoculants and plant-growth-promoting microbial inoculants . Compost-based carrier was sterilized by a gamma irradiation dose of 25 kGy to prepare seed inoculants. The irradiated-compost-based hydrocarbon-degrading microbial inoculants and king grass ( Pennisetum purpureum Schumach.) were used to remediate oil-sludge-contaminated soil using i n-situ composting for  60 days. The results showed that they could reduce THP (total petroleum hydrocarbons) by up to 82.23%. Plant-growth-promoting microbial inoculants were able to increase the dry weight of king grass from 47.3 9 to 100.66 g/plant, N uptake from 415.53 to 913.67 mg/plant, and P uptake from 76.52 to 178.33 mg/plant. Cow dung and irradiated-compost-based plant-growth-promoting microbial inoculants were able to increase the dry weight of maize ( Zea mays L.) from 5.75 to 6.63 ton/ha (12.54%) and dry weight of grain potential from 5.30 to 7.15 ton/ha (35.03%). The results indicate that irradiated-compost-based microbial inoculants are suitable for remediating a dryland and therefore increase potential resources and improve the quality of the environment. Received:  17 March 2015 ; Revised:  28 October 2015 ; Accepted:  28 October 2015

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