4.7 Article

Composting Sugarcane Filter Mud with Different Sources Differently Benefits Sweet Maize

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy13030748

Keywords

circular economy; filter mud; composts; household waste; crop productivity; managing bio-waste; organic farming; sugar industry wastes; sustainability; yield; waste disposal; Zea mays L

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Reusing organic wastes in land applications can enhance resource recovery and promote the circular economy. The by-products of sugarcane-based sugar industry, such as filter mud, molasses, and bagasse, have the potential to improve crop production and soil fertility due to their high organic matter and nutrient contents. The combination of sugarcane filter mud and compost has been found to increase the growth and yield of sweet maize in a field experiment.
Reusing organic wastes in land applications would enhance the recovery of resources, following the concepts of the circular economy. The sugarcane-based sugar industry produces various by-products (e.g., sugarcane filter mud, molasses, and bagasse) that have the potential to contribute to crop production and soil fertility, owing to their high contents of organic matter and nutrients. Although the agricultural benefits of compost utilization in agriculture have been well-documented, to the best of our knowledge, few scientific data are currently available on the effects of sugarcane filter mud combined with the application of compost for increasing crop production. Thus, a field experiment was carried out to study how sugarcane filter mud, in combination with two compost sources, affected the growth and yield of sweet maize (Zea mays var. saccharata). We compared (i) two types of compost made from brassica residue and household waste applied at a rate of 9 t ha(-1), and (ii) two application rates of sugarcane filter mud: 0 and 2 t ha(-1) to two controls without any compost application: one with (+SFM) and one without (-SFM) sugar filter mud. The results highlighted that all crop growth and yield parameters benefited more from the domestic waste compost than from the brassica straw compost. Moreover, the addition of sugar filter mud to the compost further boosted the crop performance. Based on the above results, we concluded that the addition of sugarcane filter mud to locally available composts is a feasible approach for more sustainable production of sweet maize, combining efficient waste disposal and the provision of organic matter to the soil.

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