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Nutrient management strategies in rainfed agriculture: Constraints and Opportunities.

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Title Nutrient management strategies in rainfed agriculture: Constraints and Opportunities.
Nutrient management strategies in rainfed agriculture: Constraints and Opportunities.
 
Creator ICAR_CRIDA
 
Subject necessity , increasing, food production.
 
Description Not Available
The necessity of increasing food production to meet
the demand of the ever-increasing population in India
hardly requires any over-emphasis. Estimates suggest
that at the current level of production (263 million
tonne, Mt), an additional 5 Mt food grain has to be
added each year to the national food basket for the
next decade or so to feed the increasing population.
The total area under cultivation remained more or
less constant (at 140-142 Mha) over the past several
decades, and there are indications that the agricultural
lands are gradually being diverted to accommodate
increased urbanization and industrialization. It is
unlikely that sizable additional area will be brought
in under cultivation in the foreseeable future. Therefore,
there is no other viable option than increasing
crop productivity per unit area, to meet the future
production goals.
Maintenance of native soil fertility in the intensively
cultivated regions of the country is one of the
preconditions of maintaining and improving the current
crop yield levels. Intensive cropping systems remove
substantial quantities of plant nutrients from
soil during continued agricultural production round
the year. The basic principle of maintaining the fertility
status of a soil under high intensity crop production
systems is to annually replenish those nutrients
that are removed from the field. Indeed this becomes
more relevant in the absence of the measures for adequate
replenishment of the depleted nutrient pools
through the removal of crop residues from agricultural
fields (Sanyal 2014). One would use the term
“Nutrient Mining” when the quantity of soil nutrients
removed by a crop from an agricultural field exceeds
the amount of the nutrient that is recycled back and/
or replenished to the field. Nutrient mining causes a
decline in the native soil fertility and may seriously
jeopardize future food security of the country. Unfortunately,
the concern for nutrient mining in Indian
soils is largely limited to the scientific community
and has not been integrated adequately with the crop
production practices.
Not Available
 
Date 2020-02-25T06:28:22Z
2020-02-25T06:28:22Z
2011
 
Type Technical Report
 
Identifier Not Available
Not Available
http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/32622
 
Language English
 
Relation Not Available;
 
Publisher Srinivasa Rao Ch,