The use of chemical fertilizers as soil amendment has improved crop yields in sub-Saharan Africa successfully. Unfortunately, they appear to be expensive and readily unavailable to farmers. They are also believed to cause soil acidity, eutrophication and emit greenhouse gases. This current field experiment was carried out to evaluate the effect of blood meal from abattoir blood waste on soil chemical properties (pH, organic Carbon, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus, and exchangeable Potassium), the concentration of macro elements (Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Magnesium, Calcium) and microelements (Copper, Zinc, and Iron) as well as the growth and yield of African chili pepper relative to chemical fertilizer. The study comprised four treatments: blood meal, conventional NPK, combination of blood meal and chemical NPK, and control with five replications in a Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD). The result showed that blood meal significantly improved the soil pH, organic matter content, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus and exchange Potassium, and the concentration of macro and microelements in pepper relative to chemical fertilizer and control. Also, Blood meal in combination with chemical fertilizer significantly improved the soil pH, organic matter content, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus and exchange Potassium, and the concentration of macro and microelements in pepper compared to the chemical fertilizer and control The study also revealed that the application of blood meal significantly resulted in 7.6%, 32.9% and 398.7% fruit yield increase relative to the combination of blood meal and chemical NPK, conventional NPK alone and control. The application of blood meal from abattoir blood waste can improve soil chemical properties, nutrient concentration, growth and yield of African Chili pepper under field conditions.
Published in | Plant (Volume 13, Issue 4) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11 |
Page(s) | 174-184 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2025. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Blood Meal, Nutrients Concentration, Soil Chemical Properties, Fertilizer, Yield
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
pH | 8.20 |
Organic Carbon (%) | 47.60 |
Total Nitrogen (%) | 16.92 |
C: N Ratio | 2.8:1 |
Total Phosphorus (%) | 1.87 |
Total Potassium (%) | 0.5 |
Total Magnesium (%) | 0.05 |
Total Calcium (%) | 0.15 |
Boron (ug g-1) | Traces |
Molybdenum (ug g-1) | Traces |
Copper (ug g-1) | 12.94 |
Zinc (ug g-1) | 42.85 |
Iron (ug g-1) | 272.1 |
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
pH | 6.3 |
Total Nitrogen (%) | 0.09 |
Organic Carbon (%) | 0.63 |
Available Phosphorus (ug g-1) | 0.22 |
Exchangeable Potassium (cmolc kg-1) | 0.7 |
Treatment | pH | Total Nitrogen (%) | Organic Carbon (%) | Available Phosphorus (ug g-1) | Exchangeable Potassium (cmolc-1 kg) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
T1 | 6.4b | 0.08a | 1.16a | 0.2a | 0.438a |
T2 | 5.8a | 0.85b | 1.35b | 151.8b | 0.752b |
T3 | 6.7c | 1.16c | 3.56c | 178.7c | 1.028c |
T4 | 6.9d | 1.38d | 3.79d | 191.6c | 1.116d |
P-Value | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 |
LSD | 0.11 | 0.06 | 0.10 | 13.73 | 0.059 |
Treatment | Nitrogen (%) | Phosphorus (mg g-1) | Potassium (mg g-1) | Calcium (mg g-1) | Magnesium (mg g-1) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
T1 | 2.936a | 2.820a | 20.82a | 23.20a | 1.320a |
T2 | 4.580b | 3.740b | 29.84b | 39.60b | 2.820b |
T3 | 5.220c | 4.200b | 34.54c | 45.43c | 3.160b |
T4 | 6.240d | 5.560c | 39.54d | 47.95d | 3.880c |
P-Value | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 |
LSD | 0.4172 | 0.3700 | 1.189 | 1.361 | 0.3079 |
Treatment | Iron (mg g-1) | Zinc (mg g-1) | Copper (mg g-1) |
---|---|---|---|
T1 | 0.2420a | 0.298a | 0.0716a |
T2 | 0.7140b | 0.942b | 0.1800b |
T3 | 0.9820c | 1.244b | 0.2300c |
T4 | 1.0820c | 2.140c | 0.3580d |
P-Value | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 |
LSD | 0.0936 | 0.3402 | 0.02596 |
Treatment | No of leaves plant-1 | Plant height (cm) | No of branches plant-1 | Days to 80 % fruiting |
---|---|---|---|---|
T1 | 118.2a | 96.4a | 13.80a | 80.20c |
T2 | 126.0b | 116.2b | 17.80b | 76.00b |
T3 | 130.8c | 119.8bc | 20.80c | 70.20a |
T4 | 135.8d | 121.4c | 22.20c | 70.00a |
P-Value | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 |
LSD | 2.131 | 3.554s | 1.252 | 1.556 |
Treatment | No of fruit plant-1 | Fruit weight (g) | Fruit length (cm) | Fruit diameter (cm) | Yield t ha-1 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
T1 | 100.8a | 1.020a | 5.040a | 1.000a | 1.905a |
T2 | 132.2b | 2.920b | 7.340b | 1.980b | 7.150b |
T3 | 151.8c | 3.120b | 8.080c | 2.400c | 8.829c |
T4 | 152.8c | 3.380c | 8.460c | 2.600c | 9.500d |
P-Value | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 | <.001 |
LSD | 2.513 | 0.1586 | 0.3212 | 0.2182 | 0.4402 |
Parameter | N | P | K | Mg | Ca | Cu | Zn | Fe | FD | FL | FW |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
P | 0.95*** | ||||||||||
K | 0.97*** | 0.94** | |||||||||
Mg | 0.94** | 0.89** | 0.95*** | ||||||||
Ca | 0.94** | 0.86** | 0.97*** | 0.94** | |||||||
Cu | 0.94** | 0.96*** | 0.96*** | 0.91** | 0.89** | ||||||
Zn | 0.92** | 0.93** | 0.91** | 0.86** | 0.84** | 0.92** | |||||
Fe | 0.95*** | 0.87** | 0.97*** | 0.95*** | 0.97*** | 0.91** | 0.87** | ||||
FD | 0.95*** | 0.87** | 0.95*** | 0.92** | 0.97*** | 0.88** | 0.86** | 0.97*** | |||
FL | 0.92** | 0.85** | 0.96*** | 0.92** | 0.98*** | 0.89** | 0.86** | 0.97*** | 0.96*** | ||
FW | 0.92** | 0.83** | 0.93** | 0.91** | 0.98*** | 0.85** | 0.81** | 0.94** | 0.95*** | 0.97*** | |
FY | 0.95*** | 0.86** | 0.96*** | 0.93** | 0.99*** | 0.89** | 0.84** | 0.96*** | 0.97*** | 0.98*** | 0.99*** |
UR | Urea |
TSP | Tripple Super Phosphate |
MoP | Muriate of Potash |
BM | Blood Meal |
RCBD | Randomized Complete Block Design |
ANOVA | Analysis of Variance |
LSD | Least Significance Difference |
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APA Style
Iddriss, A. R. M., Hanyabui, E., Ampiaw, R. E., Frimpong, K. A. (2025). Influence of Abattoir Waste Blood Meal on Soil Chemical Properties, Growth and Yield of African Chili Pepper (Capsicum Frutescens) in Nutrient Deficient-tropical Soil. Plant, 13(4), 174-184. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11
ACS Style
Iddriss, A. R. M.; Hanyabui, E.; Ampiaw, R. E.; Frimpong, K. A. Influence of Abattoir Waste Blood Meal on Soil Chemical Properties, Growth and Yield of African Chili Pepper (Capsicum Frutescens) in Nutrient Deficient-tropical Soil. Plant. 2025, 13(4), 174-184. doi: 10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11
AMA Style
Iddriss ARM, Hanyabui E, Ampiaw RE, Frimpong KA. Influence of Abattoir Waste Blood Meal on Soil Chemical Properties, Growth and Yield of African Chili Pepper (Capsicum Frutescens) in Nutrient Deficient-tropical Soil. Plant. 2025;13(4):174-184. doi: 10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11
@article{10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11, author = {Abdul Razak Mensah Iddriss and Emmanuel Hanyabui and Rita Esi Ampiaw and Kwame Agyei Frimpong}, title = {Influence of Abattoir Waste Blood Meal on Soil Chemical Properties, Growth and Yield of African Chili Pepper (Capsicum Frutescens) in Nutrient Deficient-tropical Soil }, journal = {Plant}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {174-184}, doi = {10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.plant.20251304.11}, abstract = {The use of chemical fertilizers as soil amendment has improved crop yields in sub-Saharan Africa successfully. Unfortunately, they appear to be expensive and readily unavailable to farmers. They are also believed to cause soil acidity, eutrophication and emit greenhouse gases. This current field experiment was carried out to evaluate the effect of blood meal from abattoir blood waste on soil chemical properties (pH, organic Carbon, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus, and exchangeable Potassium), the concentration of macro elements (Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Magnesium, Calcium) and microelements (Copper, Zinc, and Iron) as well as the growth and yield of African chili pepper relative to chemical fertilizer. The study comprised four treatments: blood meal, conventional NPK, combination of blood meal and chemical NPK, and control with five replications in a Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD). The result showed that blood meal significantly improved the soil pH, organic matter content, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus and exchange Potassium, and the concentration of macro and microelements in pepper relative to chemical fertilizer and control. Also, Blood meal in combination with chemical fertilizer significantly improved the soil pH, organic matter content, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus and exchange Potassium, and the concentration of macro and microelements in pepper compared to the chemical fertilizer and control The study also revealed that the application of blood meal significantly resulted in 7.6%, 32.9% and 398.7% fruit yield increase relative to the combination of blood meal and chemical NPK, conventional NPK alone and control. The application of blood meal from abattoir blood waste can improve soil chemical properties, nutrient concentration, growth and yield of African Chili pepper under field conditions. }, year = {2025} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Influence of Abattoir Waste Blood Meal on Soil Chemical Properties, Growth and Yield of African Chili Pepper (Capsicum Frutescens) in Nutrient Deficient-tropical Soil AU - Abdul Razak Mensah Iddriss AU - Emmanuel Hanyabui AU - Rita Esi Ampiaw AU - Kwame Agyei Frimpong Y1 - 2025/10/18 PY - 2025 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11 DO - 10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11 T2 - Plant JF - Plant JO - Plant SP - 174 EP - 184 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2331-0677 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.plant.20251304.11 AB - The use of chemical fertilizers as soil amendment has improved crop yields in sub-Saharan Africa successfully. Unfortunately, they appear to be expensive and readily unavailable to farmers. They are also believed to cause soil acidity, eutrophication and emit greenhouse gases. This current field experiment was carried out to evaluate the effect of blood meal from abattoir blood waste on soil chemical properties (pH, organic Carbon, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus, and exchangeable Potassium), the concentration of macro elements (Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Magnesium, Calcium) and microelements (Copper, Zinc, and Iron) as well as the growth and yield of African chili pepper relative to chemical fertilizer. The study comprised four treatments: blood meal, conventional NPK, combination of blood meal and chemical NPK, and control with five replications in a Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD). The result showed that blood meal significantly improved the soil pH, organic matter content, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus and exchange Potassium, and the concentration of macro and microelements in pepper relative to chemical fertilizer and control. Also, Blood meal in combination with chemical fertilizer significantly improved the soil pH, organic matter content, total Nitrogen, available Phosphorus and exchange Potassium, and the concentration of macro and microelements in pepper compared to the chemical fertilizer and control The study also revealed that the application of blood meal significantly resulted in 7.6%, 32.9% and 398.7% fruit yield increase relative to the combination of blood meal and chemical NPK, conventional NPK alone and control. The application of blood meal from abattoir blood waste can improve soil chemical properties, nutrient concentration, growth and yield of African Chili pepper under field conditions. VL - 13 IS - 4 ER -