Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Senapati B.K., Lavelle P., Giri S., Pashanasi B., Alegre J., Decaëns Thibaud, Jimenez J.J., Albrecht Alain, Blanchart Eric, Mahieux M., Rousseaux Laurent, Thomas R., Panigrahi P.K., Venkatachalam M. (1999). In-soil earthworm technologies for tropical agroecosystems. In : Lavelle P. (ed.), Brussaard L. (ed.), Hendrix P. (ed.). Earthworm management in tropical agroecosystems. Wallingford : CABI, p. 199-237.

Titre du document
In-soil earthworm technologies for tropical agroecosystems
Année de publication
1999
Type de document
Partie d'ouvrage
Auteurs
Senapati B.K., Lavelle P., Giri S., Pashanasi B., Alegre J., Decaëns Thibaud, Jimenez J.J., Albrecht Alain, Blanchart Eric, Mahieux M., Rousseaux Laurent, Thomas R., Panigrahi P.K., Venkatachalam M.
In
Lavelle P. (ed.), Brussaard L. (ed.), Hendrix P. (ed.), Earthworm management in tropical agroecosystems
Source
Wallingford : CABI, 1999, p. 199-237
Collaborative research in the Macrofauna project has enabled development of some techniques that presently are at different stages of advancement, from promising pilot experiments (tomato production and inoculation in plant nursery bags at Yurimaguas and in India) to the fully developed technique of massive worm production and biofertilization of tea gardens in Tamil Nadu (India) (patent deposited). Failures have also helped to gain better insight into the potential feasibility of techniques that had been considered in the objectives of this project. Endogeic earthworms (Pontoscolex corethrurus) may be produced in large quantities, i.e.about 12000 worms (1.6-2.8 kg live wt)/m2/year in specific culture beds using either sawdust (Yurimaguas, Peru) or a mixture of high and low quality materials (Tamil Nadu, India) mixed into soil as substrates. Cost of production of 1 kg of earthworm biomass through bed culture is about 3.6 Euro, much lower than the cost of hand collection of worms from pastures/grasslands where these species are abundant (6-125 Euro depending on the cost of labour and earthworm density). The theorical value of an active earthworm community with an average biomass of 400 kg live wt has been estimated at 1400 Euro, the price that it would cost to reintroduce an equivalent biomass produced in our culture units, indicating the cost of land restoration. Direct inoculation of earthworms in the field to improve production may only affect plant growth positively if a large biomass (greater than 30 g live wt/m2) is inoculated from the beginning. An alternative may be to concentrate the inoculum in small areas regularly distributed across the field... (D'après résumé d'auteur)
Plan de classement
Macrofaune [074FAUSOL03] ; Agronomie générale [076AGRO]
Descripteurs
LOMBRIC ; AGROSYSTEME ; TECHNOLOGIE ; INOCULATION ; CULTURE ; MULTIPLICATION VEGETATIVE ; MATIERE ORGANIQUE ; PROPRIETE PHYSIQUE ; SOL ; ETUDE EXPERIMENTALE ; ETUDE COMPARATIVE
Description Géographique
ZONE TROPICALE HUMIDE ; PEROU ; INDE ; MARTINIQUE ; COLOMBIE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F A010021553]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010021560
Contact