Dryland Agriculture and Secondary Salinization in Canal Commands of Arid Rajasthan
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Title |
Dryland Agriculture and Secondary Salinization in Canal Commands of Arid Rajasthan
Not Available |
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Creator |
V.S. Rathore
Mahesh Kumar N.D. Yadava O.P. Yadav |
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Subject |
Dryland agriculture
Secondary salinization Waterlogging Canal command area Poor-quality Groundwater Arid regions |
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Description |
Not Available
The drylands in India occupy about 80 million ha, and is spread over arid, semiarid and sub humid climatic zones presenting nearly 57% of the net cultivated area. The drylands are characterized by low precipitation, highly variable rainfall patterns, high evapotranspiration rates, inadequate available nutrients in native soils, poor quality of ground water, severe land degradation processes, short growing period and low crop yields. Despite these bio-physical constraints, the region has high human and livestock population, which mostly depend on agriculture and allied activities with limited natural resources resulting in over-exploitation of the resources. Presently degradation of natural resources (land, water, and biodiversity), decreasing farm profitability, low input-use efficiency (fertilizer, water, energy, and labor), environmental pollution (soil, water), climate change and scarcity of farm labour are threatening the sustainability of agricultural production in the drylands. Large-scale drive for modernization of agriculture in the northern and western parts of the Rajasthan, through IGNP and Narmada canal brought about considerable prosperity to the farmers. Some of the positive impacts of introduction of irrigation in the desert includes improvement in micro-climate, change in land use/ cropping pattern, improvement of soil and associated soil fertility and biological properties, but it has also brought in its wake the problems of water logging and secondary salinization. Lack of proper drainage, excess irrigation, seepage from the canals and poor planning under such situation have resulted in a rise in water table, followed by salinity build-up. In this perspective, some of the successful technologies on soil and water management in drylands provide a higher and stable crop yields and other associated profits like improving/maintaining soil quality, input use efficiency, environmental quality, well-being of farmers and reductions in land degradations, cost of cultivation, and help in climate change mitigation and adaptation. The present paper deals with the extent, significance, characteristics of and constraints of dryland agriculture along with suitable technological options to improve agricultural productivity with special reference to hot arid regions of India. Not Available |
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Date |
2019-05-13T10:42:02Z
2019-05-13T10:42:02Z 2017-01-01 |
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Type |
Research Paper
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Identifier |
V.S. Rathore, Mahesh Kumar, N.D. Yadava , O.P. Yadav. 2017. Dryland Agriculture and Secondary Salinization in Canal Commands of Arid Rajasthan. Journal of Soil Salinity and Water Quality 9(1), 30-46.
0976-0806 http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/19378 |
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Language |
English
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Relation |
Not Available;
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Publisher |
Indian Society of Soil Salinity and Water Quality
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