Long-term nutrient management effects on organic carbon fractions and carbon sequestration in Typic Haplusterts soils of Central India

14Citations
Citations of this article
14Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Productivity of agricultural soils, particularly in India's rainfed tropics, has rigorously fallen because of increased losses of soil organic carbon (SOC) during the last decades; consequently, sustaining crop productivity through the maintenance of SOC level is difficult for dryland farmers. Moreover, systematic research on carbon (C) sequestration, SOC pools, their sensitivity to management change and critical C input level for zero change in SOC, especially under cotton–greengram intercropping in Vertisols of semi-arid climates, is limited. Therefore, we studied cotton–greengram intercropping after 35 years (1987–2022) under continuous application of organics (farmyard manure/gliricidia), chemical fertilizers and substitution of 50% or 100% fertilizer nitrogen (N) through farmyard manure/gliricidia (integrated nutrient management) (INM). The INM treatments recorded significantly higher cotton–greengram system productivity and sustainable yield index. Continuous cropping without an external nutrient source decreased the soil C, while cropping with INM resulted in a positive build-up of C in both labile and stable pools. On average, about 62% of total organic carbon was stabilized in the passive pool (CLL, Less Labile C + CRC, Recalcitrant C) of SOC. The increment in SOC stock was linearly (y = 0.0767x – 0.2248; R2 = 0.87, p

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Ramteke, P., Gabhane, V., Kadu, P., Kharche, V., Jadhao, S., Turkhede, A., & Gajjala, R. C. (2024). Long-term nutrient management effects on organic carbon fractions and carbon sequestration in Typic Haplusterts soils of Central India. Soil Use and Management, 40(1). https://doi.org/10.1111/sum.12950

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free