Integrated Nutrient Management Enhances Yield, Improves Soil Quality, and Conserves Energy under the Lowland Rice–Rice Cropping System

Author:

Paramesh Venkatesh1,Kumar Parveen1,Bhagat Tejasvi1,Nath Arun Jyoti2ORCID,Manohara Kallakeri Kannappa1,Das Bappa1ORCID,Desai Brijesh Fal1,Jha Prakash Kumar3ORCID,Prasad P. V. Vara34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Indian Council of Agricultural Research-Central Coastal Agricultural Research Institute, Old Goa 403402, Goa, India

2. Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Assam University, Silchar 788011, Assam, India

3. Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Collaborative Research on Sustainable Intensification, College of Agriculture, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, USA

4. Department of Agronomy, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, USA

Abstract

Identifying sustainable crop production systems that improve yield from existing farmland while improving resource use efficiency is critical to meet the growing demands of the increasing human population and diminishing natural resources. Considering the increasing cost associated with inorganic fertilizer, integrated nutrient management using both organic and inorganic sources is important. Therefore, optimizing nutrient management practices that increase yield, improve soil quality, build up soil organic carbon storage, and maintain energy balance can help achieve sustainability in farming systems. In this regard, different nutrient management practices under the rice–rice (Oryza sativa L.) cropping system were evaluated using five different criterions, namely, (i) crop yield response, (ii) soil quality, (iii) soil carbon stock, (iv) energy efficiency, and (v) profitability under lowland situations in the Goa state situated in the western coast of India. We tested six nutrient management treatments, namely, inorganic fertilizers, organic (farmyard manure), rice straw, and their combinations over three years from 2016 to 2019. The results revealed that integrated nutrient management improved soil carbon stock, microbial biomass carbon, and soil fertility more than the other treatments. The integrated use of farmyard manure and chemical fertilizer showed significantly higher crop yield (9.86 v/s 9.41 Mg ha−1), microbial biomass carbon (354 v/s 233.7 mg kg−1 soil), soil carbon stock (36.65 v/s 25.5 Mg C ha−1), energy efficiency (23.8 v/s 22.3), and net return (1776 v/s 1508 USD) than those associated with chemical fertilizer alone. We conclude that the application of chemical fertilizers/organic sources alone may not be sustainable for the rice–rice cropping system in the Goa state of India; the focus should be on integrated nutrient management systems.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Agronomy and Crop Science

Reference86 articles.

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