Relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic components

In newly formed soils with low humus content, high concentrations of heavy metals do not have a positive effect on the development of green vegetation. In soils contaminated with crude oil, oil refining waste and heavy metals, green vegetation is not observed regardless of the concentration of heavy...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mammadov Khagani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2025-01-01
Series:BIO Web of Conferences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.bio-conferences.org/articles/bioconf/pdf/2025/02/bioconf_mblc2024_04010.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832539701794308096
author Mammadov Khagani
author_facet Mammadov Khagani
author_sort Mammadov Khagani
collection DOAJ
description In newly formed soils with low humus content, high concentrations of heavy metals do not have a positive effect on the development of green vegetation. In soils contaminated with crude oil, oil refining waste and heavy metals, green vegetation is not observed regardless of the concentration of heavy metals. However, in soils rich in humus and free from oil industry waste, restored or unpolluted by oil refining emissions, the development of green vegetation is directly proportional to the concentration of metals, including heavy metals. Fertile soils of mountainous and foothill areas are characterized by relatively high concentrations of mineral components and natural radionuclides. These results are in good agreement with the higher degree of development of herbaceous vegetation, green shrubs and trees observed in foothill areas, which is explained by both high soil fertility and the participation of microelements and natural radionuclides in accelerating photosynthesis processes.
format Article
id doaj-art-9c4e9f0106fc479ca1ab9e0b62dabb11
institution Kabale University
issn 2117-4458
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher EDP Sciences
record_format Article
series BIO Web of Conferences
spelling doaj-art-9c4e9f0106fc479ca1ab9e0b62dabb112025-02-05T10:42:42ZengEDP SciencesBIO Web of Conferences2117-44582025-01-011510401010.1051/bioconf/202515104010bioconf_mblc2024_04010Relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic componentsMammadov Khagani0Institute of Radiation Problems of Ministry of Science and EducationIn newly formed soils with low humus content, high concentrations of heavy metals do not have a positive effect on the development of green vegetation. In soils contaminated with crude oil, oil refining waste and heavy metals, green vegetation is not observed regardless of the concentration of heavy metals. However, in soils rich in humus and free from oil industry waste, restored or unpolluted by oil refining emissions, the development of green vegetation is directly proportional to the concentration of metals, including heavy metals. Fertile soils of mountainous and foothill areas are characterized by relatively high concentrations of mineral components and natural radionuclides. These results are in good agreement with the higher degree of development of herbaceous vegetation, green shrubs and trees observed in foothill areas, which is explained by both high soil fertility and the participation of microelements and natural radionuclides in accelerating photosynthesis processes.https://www.bio-conferences.org/articles/bioconf/pdf/2025/02/bioconf_mblc2024_04010.pdfheavy metalsoil wastenatural radionuclidesgreen vegetationmountainous and foothill areas
spellingShingle Mammadov Khagani
Relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic components
BIO Web of Conferences
heavy metals
oil waste
natural radionuclides
green vegetation
mountainous and foothill areas
title Relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic components
title_full Relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic components
title_fullStr Relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic components
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic components
title_short Relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic components
title_sort relationship between soil fertility in foothills and inorganic components
topic heavy metals
oil waste
natural radionuclides
green vegetation
mountainous and foothill areas
url https://www.bio-conferences.org/articles/bioconf/pdf/2025/02/bioconf_mblc2024_04010.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT mammadovkhagani relationshipbetweensoilfertilityinfoothillsandinorganiccomponents