Evidence-based Soils Agronomy for Sustainable Crop Production in Muranga County, Kenya

The project ‘Improved Agricultural Measurement for Evidence-based Investments in Improved Crop Production in Kenya’ was funded by The Nature Conservancy. The project used soil-plant diagnostic method developed at the World Agroforestry (ICRAF) to quantify soil health constraints for maize production and targeting interventions to improve soil health for agronomic gain. We tested soil and maize plant tissues to estimate macro and micronutrients and compared it with optimum plant nutrient requirements. The project was piloted in in Muranga County, Kenya.The Nature Conservancy (TNC) project dataset contains laboratory results of 524 top (0-20 cm) and sub soil (20-50 cm) soil and 206 plant tissue properties. The samples are from targeted 170 farms in Nginda, Kambiti in Maragua sub county and Kangema and Kigumo sub-counties in Muranga county of Kenya in East Africa. The datasets include MIR spectra, plant macronutrients and micronutrients measured at the World Agroforestry (ICRAF) Soil and Plant Spectral Diagnostic Laboratory and extracatable nutrients results from Crop Nutrition Laboratory Services.

Dataset’s Files

0TNC Muranga Soil Agronomy 2019.09.27.pdf
MD5: fb9a91790a5b85c220a18852fb4e705c

Report


0Variables Description-TNC Muranga.tab
MD5: a3ed757b7ff6ae60ab253c2b2e990764

Variables description


TNC Muranga MIR Soils.tab
MD5: 95bcdf2e005109fb825f2c9747afb128

Soil MIR spectra data


TNC Muranga Plants CNLS.tab
MD5: 3058c254104af7f35b35bcb38f179d44

Plant wetchem data


TNC Muranga PlantsV8.tab
MD5: 9933e4881b5a5a494a46ce7a8e0fc50e

Plant wetchem data


Terms of use
This dataset is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC-BY-4.0). The license allows you, the user, to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and/or transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
Creative Commons License.
Authors

Aynekulu, Ermias; Sitienei, Ruth; Wood, Stephen; Shepherd, Keith

Keywords

capacity development, soil health, soil properties, fertilizer, farmer recommendations, agricultural sciences, environmental sciences, social sciences

Publisher

ICRAF Soil and Land Health Theme

Publication date

12 Aug 2021

DOI

https://doi.org/10.34725/DVN/RTDZH8