Literature DB >> 32133539

Conservation Agriculture-based Sustainable Intensification of Cereal Systems Leads to Energy Conservation, Higher Productivity and Farm Profitability.

H S Jat1,2, K M Choudhary3, D P Nandal4, A K Yadav5, Tanuja Poonia6, Yadvinder Singh3, P C Sharma1, M L Jat7.   

Abstract

In the Indo-Gangetic Plains of South Asia, the quadruple challenges of deteriorating soil quality, declining groundwater, energy shortages, and diminishing farm profitability threaten sustainability of conventional till (CT)-based cereal production systems. A 5-year study was conducted to evaluate the effect of conservation agriculture (CA)-based management (tillage, crop establishment, residue management, and system intensification through mungbean integration) on energy budget, water productivity, and economic profitability in cereal (rice-wheat, RW/maize-wheat, MW)-based systems compared with CT-based management. In CA systems, crop residues contributed the maximum (~76%) in total energy input (167,995 MJ ha-1); however, fertilizer application (nonrenewable energy source) contributed the maximum (43%) in total energy input (47,760 MJ ha-1) in CT-based systems. CA-based cereal (rice/maize) systems recorded higher net energy and energy-intensiveness (EI) levels of 251% and 300%, respectively, compared with those of the CT-based rice-wheat system (RW/CT) (295,217 MJ ha-1 and 46.05 MJ USD-1), irrespective of mungbean integration. MWMb/ZT+R utilized 204% more input energy, which resulted in 14% higher net energy and 229% higher EI compared with RW/CT. CA-based RW and MW systems enhanced the crop productivity by 10 and 16%, water productivity by 56 and 33%, and profitability by 34 and 36%, while saving in irrigation water by 38 and 32%, compared with their respective CT-based systems, respectively. CA-based system improved net energy, crop productivity, and profitability; therefore, it should be outscaled to improve the soil and environmental quality in north-west India.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Conservation agriculture; Energy indices; Energy source and utilization pattern; Residue management; System productivity and profitability

Year:  2020        PMID: 32133539     DOI: 10.1007/s00267-020-01273-w

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Manage        ISSN: 0364-152X            Impact factor:   3.266


  1 in total

1.  Double zero tillage and foliar phosphorus fertilization coupled with microbial inoculants enhance maize productivity and quality in a maize-wheat rotation.

Authors:  M N Harish; Anil K Choudhary; Sandeep Kumar; Anchal Dass; V K Singh; V K Sharma; T Varatharajan; M K Dhillon; Seema Sangwan; V K Dua; S D Nitesh; M Bhavya; S Sangwan; Shiv Prasad; Adarsh Kumar; S K Rajpoot; Gaurendra Gupta; Prakash Verma; Anil Kumar; S George
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-02-24       Impact factor: 4.379

  1 in total

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