Soil degradation and mitigation in agricultural lands in the Indian Anthropocene

Author:

Bhattacharyya Ranjan1ORCID,Bhatia Arti1,Ghosh Birendra N.2,Santra Priyabrata3,Mandal Debashis4,Kumar Gopal4,Singh Raman Jeet4,Madhu Madegowda4,Ghosh Avijit5,Mandal Arup K.6,Paul Ranjan7ORCID,Datta Ashim8ORCID,Sharma Parbodh C.6,Mandal Uttam K.9,Jha Pramod10ORCID,Anil Kokkuvayil S.11,Lalitha Manickam11,Kumar Mahesh3,Panwar Nav R.3,Sarkar Dibyendu12,Patra Ashok K.13,Kundu Sumanta14,Fullen Michael A.15,Poesen Jean1617,Das Bhabani Sankar18,Reddy Nagarjuna N.18ORCID,Chaudhari Suresh K.19

Affiliation:

1. Division of Environment Science Indian Agricultural Research Institute New Delhi India

2. National Bureau of Soil Survey & Land Use Planning Kolkata Regional Center Kolkata India

3. Division of Natural Resources ICAR‐Central Arid Zone Research Institute Jodhpur India

4. Division of Soil Science and Agronomy Indian Institute of Soil & Water Conservation Dehradun India

5. Grassland and Silvopasture Management Division ICAR‐Indian Grassland and Fodder Research Institute Jhansi India

6. Division of Soil and Crop Management Central Soil Salinity Research Institute Karnal India

7. Division of Soil Resource Studies National Bureau of Soil Survey & Land Use Planning Nagpur India

8. Division of Soil and Crop Management ICAR‐Central Soil Salinity Research Institute Karnal India

9. Regional Research Station Central Soil Salinity Research Institute Regional Centre Canning Town India

10. Division of Soil Chemistry and Fertility Indian Institute of Soil Science Bhopal India

11. National Bureau of Soil Survey & Land Use Planning Bangalore Regional Center Bangalore India

12. Department of Agricultural Chemistry and Soil Science Bidhan Chandra Krishi Viswavidayalaya Mohanpur India

13. Division of Soil Biology ICAR‐Indian Institute of Soil Science Bhopal India

14. Division of Resource Management Central Research Institute of Dryland Agriculture Hyderabad India

15. Faculty of Science and Engineering The University of Wolverhampton Wolverhampton UK

16. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

17. Institute of Earth and Environmental Sciences, UMCS Lublin Poland

18. Agricultural and Food Engineering Department Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur Kharagpur India

19. Deputy Director General ICAR New Delhi India

Abstract

AbstractCurrent widespread and intensive soil degradation in India has been driven by unprecedented levels of population growth, large‐scale industrialization, high‐yield agriculture, urban sprawl and the spread of human infrastructure. The damage caused to managed and natural systems by soil degradation threatens livelihoods and local services and leads to national socio‐economic disruption. Human‐induced soil degradation results from land clearing and deforestation, inappropriate agricultural practices, improper management of industrial effluents and wastes, careless management of forests, surface mining, urban sprawl, and ill‐planned commercial and industrial development. Of these, inappropriate agricultural practices, including excessive tillage and use of heavy machinery, over‐grazing, excessive and unbalanced use of inorganic fertilizers, poor irrigation and water management techniques, pesticide overuse, inadequate crop residue and/or organic carbon inputs, and poor crop cycle planning, account for nearly 40% (121 Mha) of land degradation across India. Globally, human activities related to agriculture contribute to the transgression of four of the nine Planetary Boundaries proposed by Rockström et al. (2009): Climate Change, Biodiversity Integrity, Land‐system Change, and altered Phosphorus and Nitrogen Biogeochemical Flows. This review focuses on how knowledge of soil processes in agriculture has developed in India over the past 10 years, and the potential of soil science to meet the objectives of the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal 2: Zero Hunger (End hunger, achieve food security, improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture), using the context of the four most relevant Planetary Boundaries as a framework. Solutions to mitigate soil degradation and improve soil health in different regions using conservation agricultural approaches have been proposed. Thus, in this review we (1) summarize the outputs of recent innovative research in India that has explored the impacts of soil degradation on four Planetary Boundaries (Climate Change, Biodiversity Loss, Land‐system Change, and altered Biogeochemical Flows of Phosphorus and Nitrogen) and vice‐versa; and (2) identify the knowledge gaps that require urgent attention to inform developing soil science research agendas in India, to advise policy makers, and to support those whose livelihoods rely on the land.

Funder

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Soil Science

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