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Sustainable Intensification of Rice Fallows with Oilseeds and Pulses: Effects on Soil-Aggregation, Organic Carbon Dynamics, and Crop Productivity in Eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains

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Title Sustainable Intensification of Rice Fallows with Oilseeds and Pulses: Effects on Soil-Aggregation, Organic Carbon Dynamics, and Crop Productivity in Eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains
 
Creator Kirti Saurabh
Rakesh Kumar
Janki Sharan Mishra
Anil Kumar Singh
Surajit Mondal
Ram Swaroop Meena
Jaipal Singh Choudhary
A. K. Biswas
Manoj Kumar
Himadri Shekhar Roy
Nongmaithem Raju Singh
Ashutosh Upadhyaya (Acting Director)
Pawan Jeet
Prem Kumar Sundaram
Rohan Kumar Raman
 
Subject climate-smart agriculture (CSA),oilseeds,pulses,residue retention,rice fallow,soil health; zero-tillage
 
Description Not Available
Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) practices are becoming increasingly important due to their better adaptability to harsh climatic conditions (in general) and the unpredictability of monsoons in India (in particular). Conventional rice cultivation (e.g., PTR) involves intensive tilling followed by intensive puddling in standing water that destroys the soil aggregation and depletes carbon pools. Therefore, alternative crop establishment methods need to be devised for the sustainability of system productivity, and the suitabilities of potential oilseeds and pulses need to be tested for cropping intensification in rice-fallow regions. Hence, an ongoing experiment (implemented in 2016) was evaluated to identify the appropriate CSA management practices in restoring soil C and physical health under diversified cropping systems in the rice-fallow system of eastern India. Six tillage and crop establishment methods along with residue management were kept as the main plots [zero-till-direct-seeded rice (ZTDSR), conventional-till-DSR (CT-DSR), puddled transplanted rice (PTR), ZTDSR with rice residue retentions (ZTDSRR+), CTDSR with rice residue retention (CTDSRR+), PTR with rice residue retention (PTRR+)] while five winter/post-rainy crops (oilseeds and pulses) were raised in a subplot. In the ZTDSRR+ production system, soil macro-aggregate (%), macro-aggregate-associated C, MWD, and GMD of aggregates increased by 60.1, 71.3, 42.1, and 17.1%, respectively, in comparison to conventional tillage practices (PTR). The carbon management index (CMI) was 58% more in the ZTDSRR+ production system compared to PTR. Among the winter crops, chickpeas recorded higher values of soil structural indices and C content. In the PTR production system, system productivity, in terms of rice equivalent yield, was comparable to ZTDSRR+. ZT with residue retention in rice followed by post-rainy/winter pulses led to higher C content and structural stability of the soil. Thus, CSA management practices can improve the crop productivity as well as soil health of rice-fallow production systems of eastern India and comparable agroecotypes of South Asia.
 
Date 2023-07-17T10:22:22Z
2023-07-17T10:22:22Z
2022-9-5
 
Type Research Paper
 
Identifier
Not Available
2071-1050
http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/80134
 
Language English
 
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