CONTENTS:
FOREWORD - CONTENTS
Day 1
Division 1. Land Productivity & Food Production
O1D1. X. Hao1, B. Hill, P. Caffyn, G. Travis, V. Nelson, and X. Li
BARLEY BIOMASS YIELD, NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS UPTAKES FROM SOIL AMENDED WITH
ANAEROBICALLY DIGESTED CATTLE FEEDLOT MANURE (ADM) ......................................... 30
O2D1. M.Velayutham and R. Santhi
THE "LAW OF OPTIMUM" AND SOIL TEST BASED INTEGRATED NUTRIENT SUPPLY FOR SOIL
FERTILITY MANAGEMENT IN PRECISION FARMING ....................................................................... 32
O3D1. Narses S. Detera, Jesus P. TogñiJr, Kristine G. Salazar and Mary Ann A. Saño,
FERTILITY STATUS OF AGRICULTURAL LANDS IN PILI, CAMARINES SUR, PHILIPPINES..35
O4D1. Chi-Ling Chen, Chong-Yi Liao, His-Chia Wu, Hong-Shu Wu, Rei-ChangWang, Shan-Ney Huang
NITROGEN UPTAKE EFFICIENCY BY CROP AND LEACHING FROM FARMLAND IN TAIWAN..37
O5D1. J. Shamshuddin, M.S.K. Enio, A.A. Elisa, J.A. Farhana, C.I. Fauziah and Q.A. Panhwar
PYRITIZATION OF THE COASTAL PLAINS IN THE MALAY PENINSULA: ITS EFFECTS ON SOIL FERTILITY AND
RICEPRODUCTION ..................................................................................................... 40
O6D1. Christianto Lopulisa and Risma Neswati
EVALUATION OF SOIL FERTILITY CHARACTERISTICS FOR MAIZE PRODUCTION IN SOUTH SULAWESI,
INDONESIA ....................... 42
O7D1. Inubushi, K., Shiratori, Y., Ito, K., Arai, H., Yoshioka, N., Iswandi, A., Citraresmini, A., Nguyen, H.T., Tran, T.L.H., and
Pham, Q.H.
EFFECTS OF SOIL AMENDMENT ON ENVIRONMENT AND YIELD IN SOUTHEAST ASIA..44
O8D1. Atsushi Nakao, Kana Koyama, Taichi Omoto, JuntaYanai, Arief Hartono, and Syaiful Anwar
FERTILITY STATUS AND ITS DETERMINANT FACTORS OF CULTIVATED SOILS IN JAVA, INDONESIA..46
O9D1. Adha Fatmah Siregar, Husnain, and Tsugiyuki Masunaga
SAWAH SOIL PROPERTIES IN RELATION TO BLAST DISEASE INFECTION AND SI AVAILABILITY AT WEST JAVA
AND LAMPUNG PROVINCES, INDONESIA ........................................................... 48
Division 2. Land Degradation and Remediation
IL-2. R. Horn (Invited Lecture)
SOIL DEGRADATION – HOW FAR ARE PHYSICAL, CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL PROCESSES AND SOIL
FUNCTIONS IRREVERSIBLY AFFECTED ON VARIOUS SCALES AND WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES..50
O1D2. Iskandar, Sudarsono, and A. Hardiyanti
CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF FLY ASH AFTER 5 YEARS DEPOSITION IN LANDFILL AND ITS POTENTIAL
USE FOR SOIL AMELIORATION ................................................................................................ 52
O3D2. Masahiko Katoh, Yan Wang and Takeshi Sato
IMPROVEMENT OF ANIMAL COMPOST TO FACILITATE LEAD IMMOBILIZATION IN CONTAMINATED SOIL..54
O4D2. Keitaro Tawaraya, K. Dewi, W. and Cheng, W. Wagatsuma, T.
UTILIZATION OF MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI FOR REMEDIATION OF POST COAL MINING LAND IN INDONESIA..57
O5D2. Rodelio B. Carating, Dante Margate, and Silvino Q. Tejada
LAND DEGRADATION ASSESSMENT IN THE PHILIPPINES BASED ON THE FAO-LADA LAND USE SYSTEM
APPROACH ............................... 59
O6D2. Chien-Hui Syu, Mei-Kuei Chen, and Dar-Yuan Lee
COMPARISON OF AS SEQUESTRATION IN IRON PLAQUE AND UPTAKE BY DIFFERENT GENOTYPES OF RICE
PLANTS GROWN IN AS-CONTAMINATED PADDY SOILS ........................................................ 62
O7D2. Tai-Hsiang Huang and Zueng-Sang Chen
THE EFFECTS OF WATER MANAGEMENT ON THE ARSENIC CONTENT OF DIFFERENT PARTS OF RICE GROWN
ON ASCONTAMINATED SOILS ................................................................................... 64
O8D2. Hao-Yen Chang and Zueng-Sang Chen
EVALUATION OF WATER MANAGEMENT EFFECTING ON THE ARSENIC LEVEL OF BROWN RICE GROWN IN
ARSENICCONTAMINATED SOILS ................................................................................... 67
O9D2. Hung-Yu Lai
BIOSOLID AFFECTS LEAF AREA AND TRANSPIRATION RATE OF RAINBOW PINK (DIANTHUS CHINENSIS)
GROWN IN CADMIUMCONTAMINATED SOILS ................................................................................... 70