Literature DB >> 26739009

Economics, energy, and environmental assessment of diversified crop rotations in sub-Himalayas of India.

Raman Jeet Singh1, Roshan Lal Meena2, N K Sharma3, Suresh Kumar4, Kuldeep Kumar5, Dileep Kumar6.   

Abstract

Reducing the carbon footprint and increasing energy use efficiency of crop rotations are the two most important sustainability issues of the modern agriculture. Present study was undertaken to assess economics, energy, and environmental parameters of common diversified crop rotations (maize-tomato, and maize-toria-wheat) vis-a-vis traditional crop rotations like maize-wheat, maize + ginger and rice-wheat of the north-western Himalayan region of India. Results revealed that maize-tomato and maize + ginger crop rotations being on par with each other produced significantly higher system productivity in terms of maize equivalent yield (30.2-36.2 t/ha) than other crop rotations (5.04-7.68 t/ha). But interestingly in terms of energy efficiencies, traditional maize-wheat system (energy efficiency 7.9, human energy profitability of 177.8 and energy profitability of 6.9 MJ/ha) was significantly superior over other systems. Maize + ginger rotation showed greater competitive advantage over other rotations because of less consumption of non-renewable energy resources. Similarly, maize-tomato rotation had ability of the production process to exploit natural resources due to 14-38% less use of commercial or purchased energy sources over other crop rotations. Vegetable-based crop rotations (maize + ginger and maize-tomato) maintained significantly the least carbon footprint (0.008 and 0.019 kg CO2 eq./kg grain, respectively) and the highest profitability (154,322 and 274,161 Rs./ha net return, respectively) over other crop rotations. As the greatest inputs of energy and carbon across the five crop rotations were nitrogen fertilizer (15-29% and 17-28%, respectively), diesel (14-24% and 8-19%, respectively) and irrigation (10-27% and 11-44%, respectively), therefore, alternative sources like organic farming, conservation agriculture practices, soil and water conservation measures, rain water harvesting etc. should be encouraged to reduce dependency of direct energy and external carbon inputs particularly in sub-Himalayas of India.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Carbon emission; Energy use efficiency; Maize; Rice; Tomato; Wheat

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26739009     DOI: 10.1007/s10661-015-5085-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Monit Assess        ISSN: 0167-6369            Impact factor:   2.513


  3 in total

1.  Food production and the energy crisis.

Authors:  D Pimentel; L E Hurd; A C Bellotti; M J Forster; I N Oka; O D Sholes; R J Whitman
Journal:  Science       Date:  1973-11-02       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  Energy budgeting and carbon footprint of transgenic cotton-wheat production system through peanut intercropping and FYM addition.

Authors:  Raman Jeet Singh; I P S Ahlawat
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2015-04-23       Impact factor: 2.513

Review 3.  Carbon emission from farm operations.

Authors:  R Lal
Journal:  Environ Int       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 9.621

  3 in total
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1.  Soil respiration from fields under three crop rotation treatments and three straw retention treatments.

Authors:  Dejie Kong; Nana Liu; Weiyu Wang; Kashif Akhtar; Na Li; Guangxin Ren; Yongzhong Feng; Gaihe Yang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-09-23       Impact factor: 3.240

  1 in total

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