Moustapha Ndiaye’s research while affiliated with Cheikh Anta Diop University and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


FIGURE 1
FIGURE 2
FIGURE 3
FIGURE 4
FIGURE 5

+15

Assessment of the potential of Vachellia seyal and Prosopis chilensis for the reclamation of saline soil lands in the peanut basin production of Senegal
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2022

·

60 Reads

·

2 Citations

·

·

Moustapha Ndiaye

·

El Hadji Samba Ndao Sylla

Soil properties and microbial activities are indicators that shape plant communities and evolution. We aimed to determine the interdependency between trees, belowground herbaceous plants, soil characteristics, and arbuscular mycorrhizal communities. Vachellia seyal and Prosopis chilensis and their associated herb layers were targeted. Soils sampled beneath the trees and outside the canopies were subjected to physicochemical and microbial characterization. Randomly collected living roots of trees and dominant herbs were checked for arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization. A tree seedlings nursery was conducted using black bags filled with the following substrates: natural soil 100%, soil mixed with leaf tree plants (LTPs) as organic matter at 10%, soil mixed with LTP at 20%, soil mixed with LTP at 30%, and soil mixed with LTP at 50%. As a result, the presence of trees improves both herb richness and diversity. Soil mycorrhizal inoculum potentials are higher beneath V. seyal than P. chilensis and decreased significantly with increasing distance from trees. The soil MIP decreased with increasing organic matter content for both tree species but was more pronounced for P. chilensis. Soil salinity is lower beneath V. seyal and higher under P. chilensis and outside the canopies. Soil fertility parameters such as carbon, nitrogen, and available phosphorus are higher beneath the trees and then decreased as the distance to the trees increases. We conclude that microbial communities, soil properties, and herb richness and diversity increased beneath the trees but decreased with increasing distance from the trees. This effect is tree species-dependent as P. chilensis increased soil salinity and decreased the belowground density of herbs.

Download

Citations (1)


... Root and soil samples were collected from plant-dominated ecosystems at different sites in six countries across three continents (North America, Africa, and Asia; Table 1): (1) a semi-tropical natural saline farmland from the Senegal River (Thiao et al., 2022), (2) a tropical forest fallow site in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Kaumbu et al., 2023), (3) a tropical mining site in South Africa (Ezeokoli et al., 2020), (4) a boreal mining site in Canada (Côté, 2020), (5) a mangrove site in Kenya (tropical mangrove site) (Muwawa et al., 2021) and (6) a desert site in Kuwait (Suleiman et al., 2019). Three root and soil samples were collected aseptically from each site at a depth of 0-10 cm, for a total of 36 samples (18 each for root and soil). ...

Reference:

Evaluation of soil fungal communities using the ITS2 sublocus and 18S gene primers under different amplification methods
Assessment of the potential of Vachellia seyal and Prosopis chilensis for the reclamation of saline soil lands in the peanut basin production of Senegal