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Conservation agriculture effects on soil properties and crop productivity in a semiarid region of India

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Title Conservation agriculture effects on soil properties and crop productivity in a semiarid region of India
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Creator J. Somasundaram ,G, M. Salikram, N. K. Sinha, M. Mohanty, R. S. Chaudhary, R. C. Dalal , N. G. Mitra , D. Blaise, M. V. Coumar, K. M. Hati, J. K. ThakurA, S. Neenu, A. K. Biswas, A. K. Patra, and S. K. Chaudharie
 
Subject aggregate stability, conservation tillage, cropping system, residue retention, semiarid environment, soil moisture, soil organic carbon, Vertisols.
 
Description Not Available
Conservation agriculture (CA) including reduced or no-tillage and crop residue retention, is known to be a
self–sustainable system as well as an alternative to residue burning. The present study evaluated the effect of reduced
tillage coupled with residue retention under different cropping systems on soil properties and crop yields in a Vertisol of
a semiarid region of central India. Two tillage systems – conventional tillage (CT) with residue removed, and reduced
tillage (RT) with residue retained – and six major cropping systems of this region were examined after 3 years of
experimentation. Results demonstrated that soil moisture content, mean weight diameter, percent water stable aggregates
(>0.25 mm) for the 0–15 cm soil layer were significantly (P < 0.05) affected by tillage practices. Soil penetration resistance
was significantly higher for RT than CT. Irrespective of soil depth, there was higher soil organic carbon (SOC) for RT than
CT. The SOC fractions followed in the order: non-labile > moderately labile > less labile. At the 0–15 cm depth, the
contributions of moderately labile, less labile and non-labile C fractions to total organic C were 39.3%, 10.3% and 50.4%
respectively in RT and corresponding values for CT were 38.9%, 11.7% and 49.4%. Significant differences in different
C fractions were observed between RT and CT. Soil microbial biomass C concentration was significantly higher in RT
than CT at 0–15 cm depth. The maize–chickpea cropping system had significantly (P < 0.05) higher soybean grain
equivalent yield of 4.65 t ha–1 followed by soybean + pigeon pea (2 : 1) intercropping (3.50 t ha–1) and soybean–wheat
cropping systems (2.97 t ha–1). Thus, CA practices could be sustainable management practices for improving soil health
and crop yields of rainfed Vertisols in these semiarid regions.
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Date 2019-11-05T05:12:07Z
2019-11-05T05:12:07Z
2019-01-01
 
Type Article
 
Identifier Not Available
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http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/24358
 
Language English
 
Relation Not Available;
 
Publisher CSIRO PUBLISHING