PRODUCTION OF FERTILIZER FROM WATER HYACINTH AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE GROWTH OF JUTE LEAF {EWEDU}

ABSTRACT 

The Lake Victoria Basin (LVB) supports one of the poorest and most populous rural populations 

in the East Africa region. The increase in population and the dipping fish population, has forced 

the community around the Lake Victoria to seek alternative sources to complement their daily 

food needs. This has made large scale farming for food crops an imperative option to enable the 

community meet its daily food demands. Repeated use of the soil around the lake for large scale 

farming has led to deterioration of the soil quality and massive erosion. Chemical fertilizer which 

is readily available has been the alternative source of improving soil condition. Repeated use of 

chemical fertilizer in the catchment areas and around Lake Victoria has led to eutrophication of 

the lake waters causing the temperature to rise in the process affecting most freshwater animals. 

This process also encourages large volumes of algae and other biomass such as water hyacinth to 

flourish and in the process consume all the oxygen in the water causing ecological and socialeconomic problems, death of fish and other creatures in the water ecosystem. There is therefore 

an urgent need to revolutionize the agricultural systems by using alternative ecologically friendly 

and sustainable source of soil nutrients. With the right type of agriculture, emissions leading to 

climate change can be minimized and the capacity of nature to mitigate climate change can be 

harnessed to sequestrate significant quantities of atmospheric carbon dioxide especially in the 

soil. Global adoption of organic fertilizer has the potential to sequester up to the equivalent of 

32% of all current man-made Green House Gas (GHG) emissions. Use of organic fertilizer 

sustains the health of soils, ecosystems and people. Water hyacinth is a free floating water plant 

which is predominant in Lake Victoria. The plant is also persistent and troublesome in the lake. 

Decomposition of this plant can act as a sustainable source of organic fertilizer considering its 

high turnover. This project intends to set up simple pilot facilities for decomposing water 

hyacinth in Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda to produce organic fertilizer. The fertilizer will be used 

by farmers around the lake and its environs to assess how effective it can be in crop production. 

Molecular biology techniques and morphological characterization will be used to identify 

common bean rhizobia in composite testing field in the Lake Victoria environs. Data for the 

study will be analyzed using ANOVA and means separated using Tukey`s test at 5% level.


FOUR CHAPTERS

CHAPTER FOURS: CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS

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APA

Rafiu, Y. (2019). PRODUCTION OF FERTILIZER FROM WATER HYACINTH AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE GROWTH OF JUTE LEAF {EWEDU}. Afribary. Retrieved from https://track.afribary.com/works/production-of-fertilizer-from-water-hyacinth

MLA 8th

Rafiu, Yusuf "PRODUCTION OF FERTILIZER FROM WATER HYACINTH AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE GROWTH OF JUTE LEAF {EWEDU}" Afribary. Afribary, 30 Jul. 2019, https://track.afribary.com/works/production-of-fertilizer-from-water-hyacinth. Accessed 25 Dec. 2024.

MLA7

Rafiu, Yusuf . "PRODUCTION OF FERTILIZER FROM WATER HYACINTH AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE GROWTH OF JUTE LEAF {EWEDU}". Afribary, Afribary, 30 Jul. 2019. Web. 25 Dec. 2024. < https://track.afribary.com/works/production-of-fertilizer-from-water-hyacinth >.

Chicago

Rafiu, Yusuf . "PRODUCTION OF FERTILIZER FROM WATER HYACINTH AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE GROWTH OF JUTE LEAF {EWEDU}" Afribary (2019). Accessed December 25, 2024. https://track.afribary.com/works/production-of-fertilizer-from-water-hyacinth