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Depletion of Organic Carbon, Phosphorus, and Potassium Stock Under a Pearl Millet Based Cropping System in the Arid Region of India

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Title Depletion of Organic Carbon, Phosphorus, and Potassium Stock Under a Pearl Millet Based Cropping System in the Arid Region of India
Not Available
 
Creator Surendra Kumar Singh
Mahesh Kumar
Brij Kishore Sharma
Jagadish Chandra Tarafdar
 
Subject arid region
land use
nutrient depletion
SOC density and stock
 
Description Not Available
Carbon, phosphorus and potassium stock for a meter soil profile were determined in
2002 for a 22860 km2 area under pearl millet (pm) -pearl millet (pm) (pennisetum
americanum Linn.) cropping system and the results were compared with the database of 1975. The influence of alternate land use systems on organic carbon, phosphorus and potassium density under the similar set of conditions was also evaluated.
Soil organic cabon (SOC), phosphorus, and potassium stocks were depleted by 9.7,
17.1, and 9.0% from 1975 to 2002. Typic Torripsamment (19.7%) and Lithic Torriorthents (17.7%) suffered from the highest SOC loss, while coarse loamy, Typic
Haplocambids registered the lowest (0.9%) SOC depletion. Equivalent CO2 emission was 11.5 Tg, while 0.37 Tg CO2 was sequestered as inorganic carbon. Trends of
phosphorus and potassium depletion was similar to that of SOC. Silvipasture, Silviculture, agroforestry and pearl millet-legume sequence on Typic Torripsamments
from last thirty years at CAZRI Research Farm contained 185,141,121, and 50%
higher SOC and could sequester 9.6, 7.4, 6.3 and 2.6 kg=m2 higher CO2, respectively
than the similar soils used for pm-pm sequence. Potassium depletion and phosphorus
accumulations were significantly higher in pm-legume than other land use systems.
Cropping intensity, fertilizer application, soil texture, initial organic carbon,
organic residue recycled and period of canopy cover alone or in combination
explained the extent of variation. The study reveals that silvipasture and silviculture
are the better option for increasing SOC sequestration. Agroforestry and pearl
millet-legume sequence may be grown for arresting SOC and nutrient depletion.
Not Available
 
Date 2020-08-11T10:37:00Z
2020-08-11T10:37:00Z
2007-03-01
 
Type Research Paper
 
Identifier Not Available
Not Available
http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/39438
 
Language English
 
Relation Not Available;
 
Publisher Not Available