Intensification of Rice-Fallow Agroecosystem of South Asia with Oilseeds and Pulses: Impacts on System Productivity, Soil Carbon Dynamics and Energetics
-
Published:2023-01-06
Issue:2
Volume:15
Page:1054
-
ISSN:2071-1050
-
Container-title:Sustainability
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Sustainability
Author:
Naik Sushanta KumarORCID, Mali Santosh SambhajiORCID, Jha Bal Krishna, Kumar Rakesh, Mondal SurajitORCID, Mishra Janki Sharan, Singh Arun Kumar, Biswas Ashis Kumar, Choudhary Arbind Kumar, Choudhary Jaipal Singh, Hans Hansraj, Das Anup, Babu SubhashORCID, Layek Jayanta, Upadhyaya Ashutosh, Bhatt Bhagwati Prasad, Chaudhari Suresh Kumar
Abstract
Rice-fallow systems in South Asian countries play a pivotal role in increasing agricultural production. However, the productivity of these system is largely challenged by deteriorating soil health and limited residual soil moistures in dry-periods, precluding the possibility of winter and/or spring season crops after rice harvest. This investigation explores the possibilities of including winter and/or spring crops through conservation agriculture (CA)-based management practices and evaluates its effect on soil carbon dynamic, system productivity, energy and carbon budgeting. Field experiments were conducted at a farmer’s field in participatory modes at Chene Village, Jharkhand, India, and had five treatments comprising (1) fallow-land [FL]; (2) transplanted puddle rice (TPR)-fallow (winter)-fallow (summer), a typical cultivation practice of this region [RF]; (3) TPR–conventional-till mustard–conventional-till blackgram [CP]; (4) CA with zero-till transplanted rice (ZTTR)-ZT mustard–ZT blackgram [CA1]; (5) CA with zero-till direct seeded rice (ZTDSR)-ZT mustard–ZT blackgram [CA2]. Results revealed that CA2 comprising full CA practice of growing direct seeded rice, mustard and blackgram under ZT increased total soil organic carbon (TSOC) of 0–0.6 m soil layer by 14.3% and 10.3% over RF and CP, respectively. The C-sequestration rate was higher in CA treatments and varied from 0.55 to 0.64 Mg C ha−1 year−1. The system rice equivalent yield in CA2 during the initial four years was lower than CP but it was 23.7% higher over CP in fifth year. The CA-based system (CA2) enhanced the water productivity of rice, mustard and blackgram by 7.0%, 23.6% and 14.1% over CP, respectively. The CA2 treatment, having higher system productivity, better C-sequestration potential, lower C-footprint, higher energy and water productivity has very good potential for sustaining soil health and crop yield of rice-fallow systems.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Geography, Planning and Development,Building and Construction
Reference67 articles.
1. United Nations (2019). World Population Prospects: The 2019 Revision (Medium Variant), United Nations. 2. A meta-analysis of projected global food demand and population at risk of hunger for the period 2010–2050;Morley;Nat. Food,2021 3. Mapping rice-fallow cropland areas for short-season grain legumes intensification in South Asia using MODIS 250 m time-series data;Gumma;Int. J. Digit. Earth,2016 4. Compara-tive assessment of energy flow, carbon auditing and eco-efficiency of diverse tillage systems for cleaner and sustainable crop pro-duction in eastern India;Kumar;J. Clean. Prod.,2021 5. Saurabh, K., Kumar, R., Mishra, J.S., Singh, A.K., Mondal, S., Meena, R.S., Choudhary, J.S., Biswas, A.K., Kumar, M., and Roy, H.S. (2022). Sustainable intensification of rice fallows with oilseeds and pulses: Effects on soil aggregation, organic carbon dynamics, and crop productivity in eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains. Sustainability, 14.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|