Farmers urged not to burn rice straw
>> Wednesday, May 11, 2016
SCIENCE
CITY OF MUÑOZ, Nueva Ecija – Farmers were urged to refrain from burning rice
straw or dayami as this could reduce the soil’s nutrients and make farmlands
unproductive.
Evelyn Javier of the Philippine Rice Research
Institute (PhilRice)’s agronomy, soil and physiology division said burning rice
straw produces air pollutants such as carbon dioxide and monoxide, and nitrogen
and sulfur dioxides.
“When done frequently, the
practice can reduce the soil’s nitrogen and phosphorus contents by 25 percent,
potassium by 20 percent and sulfur by five to 60 percent,” Javier said.
She said useful insects get killed during the
burning.
She cited the Solid Waste Management Act and
the Philippine Clean Air Act, which prohibit open-field burning.
To minimize post-harvest waste, rice straw
can be used as organic fertilizer and material for mushroom production.
Rice straw and other biomass from farm
by-products can spare farmers from
buying
chemical fertilizer.
Javier said rice straw that are left to rot
in the field help maintain the level of the soil’s moisture and nutrients such
as nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur, silicon and carbon.
It also preserves the biodiversity of
microorganisms that help in nutrient cycling and efficient fertilizer
utilization.
Rice
straw can be used to protect the roots of the plants from heat and cold. It
reduces evaporation rate and prevent weeds from growing in the paddy. – RicSapnu
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