Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"CH BUNGBUNGCHA MEITEI"'
Autor:
M A ANSARI, AVINASH PANDEY, SUDHIR KUMAR, AMIT KUMAR, SANGEETA M, CH BUNGBUNGCHA MEITEI, S K SHARMA, S S ROY, ANUP DAS, D MISHRA, I M SINGH, N PRAKASH
Publikováno v:
The Indian Journal of Agricultural Sciences, Vol 89, Iss 6 (2019)
Perilla is an important underutilized oilseed crop cultivated by tribal farmers in hilly areas of north-eastern region of India. It is grown by tribal and marginalised farmers in the traditional form of agriculture. The crop has good oil quality and
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/7241f44e0e5148f587f6214f153d5161
Publikováno v:
Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis. 54:1415-1425
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Indian Society of Soil Science. 68:180-185
Autor:
Saurav Saha, Shitanshu Sharma, Meraj Alam Ansari, Y. Ramakrishna, L. Somendro Singh, N. Prakash, P.K. Saraswat, Anup Das, Shubhadeep Roy, Deepak Singh, I. M. Singh, Bappa Das, Simran Sandhu, S. Hazarika, Kl Levish Changloi, P. Punitha, R. K. Lal, Ch. Bungbungcha Meitei, B. U. Choudhury, N. Ajitkumar Singh
Publikováno v:
Journal of Environmental Management. 293:112892
Energy intensive traditional cereals based monoculture often lead to high greenhouse gas emissions and degradation of land and environmental quality. Present study aimed at evaluating the energy and carbon budget of diversified groundnut (Arachis hyp
Publikováno v:
Grass and Forage Science. 73:473-481
Efficient estimation of soil organic carbon (SOC) is vital for understanding and monitoring the effect of perennial fodder crops in conserving SOC. In subtropical regions, there is limited information on SOC accumulation and its allocation into diffe
Autor:
L. K. Baishya, Subhadip Ghosh, Ch. Bungbungcha Meitei, Dibyendu Sarkar, Khumlo Levish Chongloi, Anup Das, D. J. Rajkhowa
Publikováno v:
CATENA. 135:321-327
Secondary forest in shifting cultivation might influence soil organic carbon (SOC) stock. However, information with respect to SOC accumulation or depletion in fallow stand with secondary forest in shifting cultivation is insufficient. We, therefore,