Mehrunisa Memon
Sindh Agriculture University
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Featured researches published by Mehrunisa Memon.
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2011
Mehrunisa Memon; Mohammed Saleh Soomro; Mohammad Saleem Akhtar; Kazi Suleman Memon
The southern Sindh province of Pakistan adjoins the Arabian Sea coast where drinking water quality is deteriorating due to dumping of industrial and urban waste and use of agrochemicals and yet has limited fresh water resources. The study assessed the drinking water quality of canal, shallow pumps, dug wells, and water supply schemes from the administrative districts of Thatta, Badin, and Thar by measuring physical, chemical, and biological (total coliform) quality parameters. All four water bodies (dug wells, shallow pumps canal water, and water supply schemes) exceeded WHO MPL for turbidity (24%, 28%, 96%, 69%), coliform (96%, 77%, 92%, 81%), and electrical conductivity (100%, 99%, 44%, 63%), respectively. However, the turbidity was lower in underground water, i.e., 24% and 28% in dug wells and shallow pumps as compared to open water, i.e., 96% and 69% in canal and water supply schemes, respectively. In dug wells and shallow pumps, limits for TDS, alkalinity, hardness, and sodium exceeded, respectively, by 63% and 33%; 59% and 70%, 40% and 27%, and 78% and 26%. Sodium was major problem in dug wells and shallow pumps of district Thar and considerable percent in shallow pumps of Badin. Iron was major problem in all water bodies of district Badin ranging from 50% to 69% and to some extent in open waters of Thatta. Other parameters as pH, copper, manganese, zinc, and phosphorus were within standard permissible limits of World Health Organization. Some common diseases found in the study area were gastroenteritis, diarrhea and vomiting, kidney, and skin problems.
Pedosphere | 2014
Mohammad Saleem Akhtar; Muhammad Imran; A. Mehmood; Mehrunisa Memon; Shah Rukh; G.S. Kiani
Abstract Apatite is the dominant phosphorus (P) mineral in early stages of soil development, and its redistribution as labile forms under pedogenesis controls terrestrial bioavailability. Quantitative distribution of labile forms of P and apatite-P was examined in Pothwar Loess Plain, Pakistan where the degree of pedogenesis varied with relief. Four soil types, Typic Ustorthents (Rajar), Typic Calciustepts (Missa), Udic Calciustepts (Basal), and Udic Haplustalfs (Guliana), were sampled from three replicated locations at genetic horizon level. With the exception of total P value at surface, the mean total and apatite-P decreased towards the surface in Udic Haplustalfs and Udic Calciustepts where dicalcium and octacalcium phosphate increased toward surface. Iron (oxides and oxyhydroxides) adsorbed and occluded P forms were also in greater quantities in Udic Haplustalfs and increased toward the surface, whereas they were lowest and uniform in the Typic Ustorthents. Aluminum- and organic P correlated with soil organic matter. Apatite-P decreased exponentially with an increase in the sum of iron adsorbed and occluded P fractions, and fitted the equation M ( x ) = M 0 [1 – exp(– wx )] with r 2 = 0.996, where M ( x ) is the mean apatite-P concentration in solum, M 0 is the apatite-P content in the loess sediments, x is the cumulative iron adsorbed and occluded P, and w is an empirical factor indicating the change rate of apatite-P in the loess. From the calculated apatite-P of 740 mg kg −1 at the time of deposition, mean apatite-P loss was 60% in Udic Haplustalfs, 33% in Udic Calciustepts, 23% in Typic Calciustepts, and 8% in Typic Ustorthents. The transformation of soil P to labile forms was faster and deeper in level or slight depressions followed by gently sloping areas in wide plains, and was the least in the gullied land.
Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science | 2016
Sohail Jamil; Ayaz Mehmood; Mohammad Saleem Akhtar; Mehrunisa Memon; Muhammad Imran; Shah Rukh; Abdul Qayyum; Matthew A. Jenks
ABSTRACT Understanding the regional dynamics of soil phosphorus (P) chemistry is essential for developing the best fertilizer management practices aimed at enhancing P use efficiency in cropping systems. The soil content of apatite, an important P-containing lithogenic mineral, can be influenced by its position in the local relief of a landscape. The objective of this study was to determine quantitative distribution of various P-forms in estuary plains of southern Pakistan in relation to soil genesis. Soils at different positions within the estuary plain were sampled at various genetic horizons. Apatite-P was the most abundant inorganic P constituent (380-590 mg kg−1) in all cases, followed in decreasing abundance by iron oxides surfaces adsorbed phosphorus (Fe-P), octacalcium phosphates (Ca8-P), aluminum oxides with surface bound P (Al-P) and the least abundant was the phosphorus occluded in iron oxides mineral (Occl-P). The abundance of apatite-P and these other forms of secondary phosphate varied for the soils at different relief positions in these estuary plain landscapes.
Geoderma | 2011
Mohammad Saleem Akhtar; Doris Stüben; Stefan Norra; Mehrunisa Memon
Archive | 2012
Mehrunisa Memon; Ghulam Murtaza Jamro; Noor-Un-Nisa Memon; Kazi Suleman Memon; Mohammad Saleem Akhtar
Archive | 2009
M. Saleem Akhtar; Mehrunisa Memon
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2017
Ghulam Muhiyuddin Kaloi; Mehrunisa Memon; Kazi Suleman Memon; Sagheer Ahmad; Saghir Ahmed Sheikh; Ghulam Murtaza Jamro
Soil in the Environment | 2013
Noor Muhammad Mashori; Mehrunisa Memon; Kazi Suleman Memon; Hidayatullah Kakar
Archive | 2010
M. D. Memon; Muhammad Ibrahim Keerio; Inayatullah Rajpar; M. M. Jiskani; Rattan Lal; Jose L. Garcia-Pabon; Jim Dunwell; Mehrunisa Memon; P. Hollington; B. Kranz; H. A. Osmanu; Zheng Tian Qing; I. H. Kathio; N. Pennsylvania; Chris Anderson; Muhammad Arshad; M. Abid Kharal; A. R. Mahar; Asif Tanveer; Asim Gulzar; Shamsuddin Tunio; Haji Islamuddin Majeedano; Shah Alam Khan; Muhammad Aslam Umrani
Pakistan Journal of Botany | 2019
Saghir Ahmed Sheikh; Benish Nawaz Mirani; Shafi Muhammad Nizamani; Aasia Akbar Panhwar; Mehrunisa Memon