scholarly journals PERFORMA PRODUKSI KEBUN KELAPA SAWIT RAKYAT PADA DATARAN TINGGI

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Posman HP Marpaung ◽  
Fandri Siburian ◽  
Tulus Fernando Silitonga

The limitation of mineral land as a productive land makes some people expand oil palm cultivation to peat land in marginal class conditions (Class S3). The expansion of oil palm plantations into peatlands is accompanied by Government Regulation No. 57 of 2016 concerning Protection and Management of Peat Ecosystems. The regulation has a positive effect to protect and restore the hydrological function of peat, but also affects the management of oil palm cultivation. The limitation of peatlands also makes some people switch to using the highlands as a form of agricultural and plantation extensification. Planting oil palms in the highlands is a form of expansion of oil palm cultivation that is limited due to lack of sufficient land availability. It is necessary to carry out technical culture and cost requirements that are "more" in order to obtain the same production resembling the treatment of oil palm technical culture in very suitable class land conditions (Class S1). Some state-owned companies have planted oil palms in the highlands. Some state-owned plantation sites have even been converted to oil palm from other plantation crops. This will certainly be very different if done by farmers (smallholders) who are in the highlands. Farmers' knowledge of technical culture and the high amount of funds that will be used to cultivate oil palms are an inhibiting factor other than marginal land class.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nick Pasiecznik

Abstract E. guineensis, the oil palm or African oil palm, is native to equatorial Africa, although the only other species in the genus (E. oleifera) is indigenous to South and Central America. E. guineensis, however, is the major economic species: fruits of E. oleifera have a much lower oil content and are used only locally (Westphal and Jansen, 1989). However, E. guineensis was introduced into South America during the time of the slave trade, and naturalized groves are reported in coastal areas of Brazil near Bélem. In the mid-1800s it was introduced to South-East Asia via the Botanic Gardens in Bogor, Indonesia. The first oil-palm estates in Sumatra (since 1911) and Malaysia (since 1917) used plant material from second- and third-generation descendants of the original Bogor palms, from which one of the breeding populations, the Deli Dura, is derived (Westphal and Jansen, 1989). After soyabean, E. guineensis is the second most important crop worldwide for the supply of edible vegetable oil. Palm oil kernel, for example, is a major agricultural export from Malaysia, and South-East Asia is the main area of production.E. guineensis yields two types of oil: palm oil from the fleshy mesocarp, and palm-kernel oil from the kernel, in a volume ratio 10:1. Most palm oil is used in food preparation (margarines, and industrial frying oils used to prepare snack foods, etc.). Palm-kernel oil is similar in composition and properties to coconut oil, and is used in confectionery, where its higher melting point is particularly useful. It is also used in the manufacture of lubricants, plastics, cosmetics and soaps. The oil palm is a monoecious, erect, single-stemmed tree usually 20-30 m high. The root system is shallow and adventitious, forming a dense mat in the top 35 cm of the soil. The main stem is cylindrical, up to 75 cm diameter. E. guineensis palm fronds are not as suitable for thatching as other palm species, as the leaflets attach to the rachis at two angles. The oil palm is indigenous to the lowland humid tropics, and thrives on a good moisture supply and relatively open conditions. It can tolerate fluctuating water-tables with periods of standing water, although continuously flooded conditions are unsuitable. Sites often selected as suitable for oil palm are swamps, riverbanks, or sites considered too moist for tropical rain forest trees. Rainfall is often the major factor limiting production in plantations: highest yields occur where rainfall is evenly distributed throughout the year, with an optimum of 150 mm per month (Westphal and Jansen, 1989). Oil palms can grow on a variety of soil types, from sandy soils to lateritic red and yellow podzols, young volcanic soils, alluvial clays and peat soils; water-holding capacity appears to be the most important soil criterion. It is a demanding crop in terms of soil nutrients. The oil palm also has potential for incorporation into agroforestry practices. Traditional oil palm management in some areas of West Africa often incorporated both pure oil palm groves (perhaps selectively retained), scattered oil palms within temporary fields, and unexploited oil palms in mixed forest (Gupta, 1993). Harvesting of fruits usually starts about 2½ years after field planting; bunches ripen throughout the year and so harvesting usually takes place at intervals of 2 to 3 weeks in any particular area. Because oil palm is so responsive to environmental conditions, yields may vary greatly. However, over the lifetime of a palm tree, yields generally rise to a maximum in the first 6-8 years (after field planting), and will subsequently decline slowly. In Malaysia and Sumatra, well-managed plantations yield between 24 and 32 tonnes/hectare of fruit bunches; the oil yield from this will be between 4.8 and 7 tonnes/hectare. Oil palm plantations are often regarded as a better use of the land than annual food crops in humid tropical areas where soils are prone to leaching: the plantations provide continuous ground cover, and the palm canopy helps protect against soil erosion. Oil palm stems are increasingly used as a raw material for paper and composite board production. This area has big prospects in wood-based industries. It is recommended that more research is undertaken into the properties and utilization. Propagation techniques, the management of pests and diseases, and genetic resources are other areas in which studies could usefully be undertaken.


Agromet ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 11
Author(s):  
Tania June ◽  
Ni Wayan Srimani Puspa Dewi ◽  
Ana Meijide

<p>Oil palm is one important agricultural commodity that has high economic value. Oil palm productivity is significantly influenced by its water use (needs). Measurement and estimation of oil palm evapotranspiration is needed for determination of its water needs. Various methods are available and this study compare three methods, consisting of aerodynamic, Bowen-Ratio and Penman-Monteith methods in analyzing water needs/use of oil palms plantation located in PTPN VI Jambi.  Peak of evapotranspiration rate occured in the afternoon around 13.00 and 14.00 local time. Bowen-Ratio method has higher estimation value of evapotranspiration than the other two methods. Ratio between evapotranspiration and global radiation of two and ten-years old oil palm plantations remain similar, around 47%. Penman Monteith method has the nearest estimation value to reference method (aerodynamic method) showed by the smallest RMSE value, 0.087 for two years oil palm and 0.157 for ten-years old oil palm.<strong> </strong></p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-115
Author(s):  
M. Gasali M ◽  
Rizki Juliarman

Abstrak. Wheelbarrow adalah salah satu alat angkut material yaitu gerobak sorong, wheelbarrow pada awalnya merupakan alat angkut yang sangat berguna bagi masyarakat yang melakukan aktivitas pengangkutan hasil perkebunan ataupun juga barang-barang bangunan yang lain sebagainya, jika dilihat dari definisinya wheelbarrow adalah alat angkut yang didorong dengan tangan, memiliki 1 buah roda, dan didorong oleh satu orang operator melalui handle. Sejalan dengan hal tersebut telah banyak pengembangan-pengembangan yang dilakukan terhadap sistem dan metode penunjang untuk mempermudah semua aktivitas tersebut. Salah satunya alat bantu angkut meterial yaitu gerobak sorong (wheelbarrow). Gerobak sorong atau wheelbarrow pada awalnya merupakan alat angkut yang sangat berguna bagi masyarakat untuk melakukan aktivitas pengangkutan hasil perkebunan ataupun juga barang-barang bangunan dan lain sebagainya,  Hasil perhitungan persentil yang dilakukan didapat panjang 29,02 cm dengan pembulatan menjadi 30 cm. jadi, panjang hendle perancangan yang ergonomis berdasarkan antropometri pekerja kebun kelapa sawit adalah sebesar 30 cm, dihitung dari titik las, diameter handle wheelbarrow sebesar 3,03 cm, dan lebar hendle 9,04 cm dengan pembulatan menjadi 9 cm. Hasil penelitian setelah dilakukan perancangan ulang Wheelbarrow yang berbasis Quality Function Deployment (QFD) adalah memiliki aspek-aspek quality, ergonomi yang lengkap yaitu efektif, nyaman, aman, sehat, dan efisien (ENASE). Keluhan muskuloskeletal karyawan Perkebunan mengalami penurunan sebesar  31,79%. Design Handle Wheelbarrow to Reduce Musculoskeletal Complaints Method Using Quality Function Deployment (QFD) in Oil Palm Plantation Bagan Jaya District, Indragiri Hilir, RiauAbstract. Wheelbarrow is one means of conveyance of material, namely a wheelbarrow, wheelbarrow initially a conveyance which is very useful for people who transport activity plantation crops or also goods buildings, etc., when seen from the definition wheelbarrow is a means of transport that is driven by hand , has 1 piece wheels, and driven by an operator through the handle. In line with this has been a lot of developments done on the system and methods of support to facilitate all those activities. One of these tools is the wheelbarrow transport meterial (wheelbarrow). Handcart or wheelbarrow to haul awalnyamerupakan a very useful tool for people to do activities or also the transportation of farm goods and other buildings, performed percentile calculation result obtained by rounding length of 29.02 cm to 30 cm. so long hendle ergonomic design based anthropometric oil palm plantation workers is 30 cm, calculated from the point of welding, wheelbarrow hendle diameter of 3.03 cm, and width hendle 9, 04 cm with rounding to 9 cm. Results of the study after the redesign Wheelbarrow based Quality Function Deployment (QFD) is to have the aspects of quality, ergonomics complete that is effective, convenient, safe, healthy, and efficient (ENASE). Musculoskeletal complaints plantation employees decreased by 31.79%.


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 9209-9242 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Röll ◽  
F. Niu ◽  
A. Meijide ◽  
A. Hardanto ◽  
A. Knohl ◽  
...  

Abstract. Oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) plantations cover large and continuously increasing areas of humid tropical lowlands. Landscapes dominated by oil palms usually consist of a mosaic of mono-cultural, homogeneous stands of varying age, which may be heterogeneous in their water use characteristics. However, studies on the water use characteristics of oil palms are still at an early stage and there is a lack of knowledge on how oil palm expansion will affect the major components of the hydrological cycle. To provide first insights into hydrological landscape-level consequences of oil palm cultivation, we derived transpiration rates of oil palms in stands of varying age, estimated the contribution of palm transpiration to evapotranspiration, and analyzed the influence of fluctuations in environmental variables on oil palm water use. We studied 15 two- to 25 year old stands in the lowlands of Jambi, Indonesia. A sap flux technique with an oil palm specific calibration and sampling scheme was used to derive leaf-, palm- and stand-level water use rates in all stands under comparable environmental conditions. Additionally, in a two- and a 12 year old stand, eddy covariance measurements were conducted to derive evapotranspiration rates. Water use rates per leaf and palm increased 5-fold from an age of two years to a stand age of approx. 10 years and then remained relatively constant. A similar trend was visible, but less pronounced, for estimated stand transpiration rates of oil palms; they varied 12-fold, from 0.2 mm day−1 in a 2 year old to 2.5 mm day−1 in a 12 year old stand, showing particularly high variability in transpiration rates among medium-aged stands. Confronting sap flux and eddy-covariance derived water fluxes suggests that transpiration contributed 8 % to evapotranspiration in the 2 year old stand and 53 % in the 12 year old stand, indicating variable and substantial additional sources of evaporation, e.g. from the soil, the ground vegetation and from trunk epiphytes. Diurnally, oil palm transpiration rates were characterized by an early peak between 10 and 11 a.m.; there was a pronounced hysteresis in the leaf water use response to changes in vapor pressure deficit for all palms of advanced age. On the day-to-day basis this resulted in a relatively low variability of oil palm water use regardless of fluctuations in vapor pressure deficit and radiation. We conclude, that oil palm dominated landscapes show some spatial variations in (evapo)transpiration rates, e.g. due to varying age-structures, but that the temporal variability of oil palm transpiration is rather low. Stand transpiration rates of some studied oil palm stands compared to or even exceed values reported for different tropical forests, indicating a high water use of oil palms under certain site or management conditions. Our study provides first insights into the eco-hydrological characteristics of oil palms as well as a first estimate of oil palm water use across a gradient of plantation age. It sheds first light on some of the hydrological consequences of the continuing expansion of oil palm plantations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 17
Author(s):  
Christine Refina Malinda Pande ◽  
Deannes Isynuwardhana

ABSTRACTOil palm companies are one of the sectors that have an impact on the economy. Indonesia has a climate that is very suitable for planting oil palm. The company's goal is to make a profit. Then the company will improve its financial performance in order to achieve its goals. Basically, the goal of the company is to be able to increase the company's profitability. The company's profitability will reflect a company's financial condition, and illustrate the effectiveness and efficiency of the company in managing its operations. The purpose of this study is to determine the significant effect of leverage, liquidity, working capital turnover, and inflation that affect the profitability of oil palm companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange in the 2015-2018 period with a large sample of 11 companies. The results of the study with panel data analysis using the E-views 9 application. The data collection method used a secondary data source in the form of an annual financial report document. Based on the research results, it is found that simultaneously leverage, liquidity, working capital turnover, inflation have an effect on profitability. Partially leverage, liquidity has a positive effect on profitability, and working capital turnover, inflation has no effect on profitability.


2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-386
Author(s):  
Hermione Koussihouèdé ◽  
Hervé Aholoukpè ◽  
Jeremie Adjibodou ◽  
Haniel Hinkati ◽  
Bernard Dubos ◽  
...  

AbstractBeninese smallholders associate food crops and cash crops with immature oil palms to reduce field maintenance costs and gain income before the palms reach productive phase. Little is known about the effects of these crops on the nutritional status and growth of the palms in their immature phase even though the yield of adult palms can be affected by the management practices during this phase. The objective of this study was to evaluate the most common oil palm-based intercropping systems found in southern Benin in terms of nutritional status and growth of the palm. Within 15 oil palm farms, we compared 15 immature oil palm fields where the crop succession associated with the oil palms was dominated by maize, cassava, tomato, and pineapple. The nutrient concentrations in the soil and the palm leaves, and growth indicators were measured at the end of the immature phase. We found that the palm growth indicators were the lowest in the successions with pineapple. N and P nutrition of the immature palms was satisfactory but K was deficient in all systems, especially in those with pineapple. The K levels in the soils and palm leaves were correlated. Rough field budgets comparing the amounts of N and K applied to the crop successions with their N and K exports from non-returning products indicated that soil indigenous K supply would be particularly depleted in the systems with pineapple. We concluded that the young oil palms were affected by the competition for K exerted by the crop successions with pineapple even though they were the most fertilized in the region. The high profitable crop is therefore associated with the lowest growth rates of the immature palms. The mineral fertilizer management in these oil palm temporary intercropping systems should be improved.


2014 ◽  
Vol 44 (6) ◽  
pp. 428-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. L. Mohammed ◽  
A. Rimbawanto ◽  
D. E. Page

1969 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian J. Wood

Oryctes rhinoceros (L.) breeds in the rotting stumps of oil palms and rubber trees, and is a potentially devastating pest of young oil palm replants, the unopened leaves of which are attacked by the adults. In view of the planters' belief that the pest is controlled by heavy ground vegetation, the effects of cover (natural, legume or grass) and bare ground on beetle populations in rotting logs and incidence of beetle attack on young palms were compared in a series of four experiments.


1972 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 347-353 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. H. V. Corley ◽  
C. K. Mok

SUMMARYPotassium application appeared to increase dry matter production and yield of oil palms, primarily by increasing leaf area, while nitrogen increased both leaf area and net assimilation rate. Responses to phosphorus and magnesium were harder to interpret. Production of vegetative dry matter attained a fairly constant level at the higher rates of fertilizer application, while the ratio of bunch yield to total dry matter production was little affected by fertilizer treatments. The importance of these results for oil palm breeding, and their possible value in diagnosing fertilizer requirements, are briefly discussed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 324
Author(s):  
Akmel Meless Siméon

The operation of the oil palm tree is taking a global scale. In Ivory Coast, people are more involved in the activity because of its importance. The hypothesis of Lodjukru (Snipe region) is for this eloquent purpose, because large areas of oil palms (Traditional, selected) are perceptible everywhere. These are the cases observed in Jasakp, Dibrm and Armɛbɛ, which is our field of investigation. The study (qualitative and quantitative) identified the different stages and explained the determinants (socioeconomic value) of the operation of the oil palm tree. It also described and analyzed the environmental problems and health risks associated with the activity.


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