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Crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern India

Presently, rice-fallows are targeted for cropping intensification in South Asia. Rice-fallows a rainfed mono-cropping system remain fallow after rice due to lack of irrigation facilities and poor socio-economic condition of the farmers. Nevertheless, there is the scope of including ecologically adap...

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Autores principales: Kumar, Rakesh, Mishra, Janki Sharan, Rao, Karnena Koteswara, Mondal, Surajit, Hazra, Kali Krishna, Choudhary, Jaipal Singh, Hans, Hansraj, Bhatt, Bhagwati Prasad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7341809/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32636432
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-67973-9
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author Kumar, Rakesh
Mishra, Janki Sharan
Rao, Karnena Koteswara
Mondal, Surajit
Hazra, Kali Krishna
Choudhary, Jaipal Singh
Hans, Hansraj
Bhatt, Bhagwati Prasad
author_facet Kumar, Rakesh
Mishra, Janki Sharan
Rao, Karnena Koteswara
Mondal, Surajit
Hazra, Kali Krishna
Choudhary, Jaipal Singh
Hans, Hansraj
Bhatt, Bhagwati Prasad
author_sort Kumar, Rakesh
collection PubMed
description Presently, rice-fallows are targeted for cropping intensification in South Asia. Rice-fallows a rainfed mono-cropping system remain fallow after rice due to lack of irrigation facilities and poor socio-economic condition of the farmers. Nevertheless, there is the scope of including ecologically adaptable winter crops in water-limited rice-fallow conditions with effective moisture conservation practices. The study aimed to identify the winter-crops that are adaptable and productive in rice-fallow conditions and to evaluate the different tillage-based crop establishment practices for soil moisture conservation, grain yield, economics, and sustainability parameters. Six different crop establishment and residue management (CERM) practices viz., zero-tillage direct seeded rice (ZTDSR), zero-tillage transplanted rice (ZTTPR), puddled transplanted rice (PTR), ZTDSR with rice residue retention (ZTDSR(R+)), ZTTPR with rice residue retention (ZTTPR(R+)), PTR with rice residue retention (PTR(R+)) as main-plot treatment and five winter crops (chickpea, lentil, safflower, linseed, and mustard) as sub-plot treatment were evaluated in a split-plot design. The productivity of grain legumes (chickpea and lentil) was higher over oilseed crops in rice-fallow conditions with an order of chickpea > lentil > safflower > mustard > linseed. Among the CERM practices, ZTDSR(R+) and ZTDSR treatments increased the grain yield of all the winter crops over PTR treatment, which was primarily attributed to higher soil moisture retention for an extended period. Grain yield increment with conservation tillage practices was highly prominent in safflower (190%) followed by lentil (93%) and chickpea (70%). Rice grain yield was higher (7–35%) under PTR treatment followed by ZTDSR treatment. Conservation tillage practices (ZTDSR, ZTTPR) reduced energy use (11–20%) and increased the energy ratio over conventional tillage practice (PTR), higher in rice-safflower, rice-lentil and rice-chickpea rotations. Higher net return was attained in rice-safflower and rice-chickpea rotations with ZTDSR(R+) treatment. Predicted emission of greenhouse gases was markedly reduced in ZTDSR treatment (30%) compared to ZTTPR and PTR treatments. Hence, the study suggests that cropping intensification of rice-fallows with the inclusion of winter crops like chickpea, lentil, and safflower following conservation tillage practices (ZTDSR(R+) in particular) could be the strategic options for achieving the higher system productivity, economic returns, and energy use efficiency with the reduced emission of greenhouse gases.
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spelling pubmed-73418092020-07-09 Crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern India Kumar, Rakesh Mishra, Janki Sharan Rao, Karnena Koteswara Mondal, Surajit Hazra, Kali Krishna Choudhary, Jaipal Singh Hans, Hansraj Bhatt, Bhagwati Prasad Sci Rep Article Presently, rice-fallows are targeted for cropping intensification in South Asia. Rice-fallows a rainfed mono-cropping system remain fallow after rice due to lack of irrigation facilities and poor socio-economic condition of the farmers. Nevertheless, there is the scope of including ecologically adaptable winter crops in water-limited rice-fallow conditions with effective moisture conservation practices. The study aimed to identify the winter-crops that are adaptable and productive in rice-fallow conditions and to evaluate the different tillage-based crop establishment practices for soil moisture conservation, grain yield, economics, and sustainability parameters. Six different crop establishment and residue management (CERM) practices viz., zero-tillage direct seeded rice (ZTDSR), zero-tillage transplanted rice (ZTTPR), puddled transplanted rice (PTR), ZTDSR with rice residue retention (ZTDSR(R+)), ZTTPR with rice residue retention (ZTTPR(R+)), PTR with rice residue retention (PTR(R+)) as main-plot treatment and five winter crops (chickpea, lentil, safflower, linseed, and mustard) as sub-plot treatment were evaluated in a split-plot design. The productivity of grain legumes (chickpea and lentil) was higher over oilseed crops in rice-fallow conditions with an order of chickpea > lentil > safflower > mustard > linseed. Among the CERM practices, ZTDSR(R+) and ZTDSR treatments increased the grain yield of all the winter crops over PTR treatment, which was primarily attributed to higher soil moisture retention for an extended period. Grain yield increment with conservation tillage practices was highly prominent in safflower (190%) followed by lentil (93%) and chickpea (70%). Rice grain yield was higher (7–35%) under PTR treatment followed by ZTDSR treatment. Conservation tillage practices (ZTDSR, ZTTPR) reduced energy use (11–20%) and increased the energy ratio over conventional tillage practice (PTR), higher in rice-safflower, rice-lentil and rice-chickpea rotations. Higher net return was attained in rice-safflower and rice-chickpea rotations with ZTDSR(R+) treatment. Predicted emission of greenhouse gases was markedly reduced in ZTDSR treatment (30%) compared to ZTTPR and PTR treatments. Hence, the study suggests that cropping intensification of rice-fallows with the inclusion of winter crops like chickpea, lentil, and safflower following conservation tillage practices (ZTDSR(R+) in particular) could be the strategic options for achieving the higher system productivity, economic returns, and energy use efficiency with the reduced emission of greenhouse gases. Nature Publishing Group UK 2020-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC7341809/ /pubmed/32636432 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-67973-9 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Article
Kumar, Rakesh
Mishra, Janki Sharan
Rao, Karnena Koteswara
Mondal, Surajit
Hazra, Kali Krishna
Choudhary, Jaipal Singh
Hans, Hansraj
Bhatt, Bhagwati Prasad
Crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern India
title Crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern India
title_full Crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern India
title_fullStr Crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern India
title_full_unstemmed Crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern India
title_short Crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern India
title_sort crop rotation and tillage management options for sustainable intensification of rice-fallow agro-ecosystem in eastern india
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7341809/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32636432
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-67973-9
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