Weed strip management for minimizing soil erosion and enhancing productivity in the sloping lands of north-eastern India
Autor: | Nagendra K. Singh, Rattan Lal, Ravender Singh, Pawan Kumar Agrawal, K.K. Satapathy, Abhishek Rathore, Pranab Choudhury, N. K. Lenka |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Soil biodiversity
Erosion control Soil Science Buffer strip 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences 010501 environmental sciences 01 natural sciences No-till farming Agronomy 040103 agronomy & agriculture 0401 agriculture forestry and fisheries Environmental science Soil fertility Cover crop Soil conservation Surface runoff Agronomy and Crop Science 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Earth-Surface Processes |
Zdroj: | Soil and Tillage Research. 170:104-113 |
ISSN: | 0167-1987 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.still.2017.03.012 |
Popis: | Soil erosion and shifting cultivation are the major constraints to agriculture in the north-eastern region of India. Low acceptance of cost-intensive soil conservation technologies (e.g., terracing) calls for developing low-cost erosion control measures. Thus, a field experiment was conducted during the monsoon period of 2008 and 2009, in runoff plots on a land slope of 40% to test the hypothesis that weed cover, if properly managed, minimizes soil erosion and improves soil productivity. The treatments implemented in duplicates were: maize (Zea mays) under shifting cultivation (T1), maize on contour lines (T2), groundnut (Arachis hypogea) on upper and maize on lower half of treatment plot, with both on contour lines (T3), groundnut on contour lines (T4) and maize on contour lines with natural vegetation as buffer strips (T5). The average sediment concentration of runoff water varied from 5.20 g L−1 (T1) to 1.07 g L−1 (T5) in 2008 and from 3.84 (T1) to 0.89 g L−1 (T5) in 2009. The soil loss ranged from 20.8 (T1) to 4.7 Mg ha−1 (T5), with corresponding loss of 670–147 kg ha−1 of SOC, 6.85–1.48 kg ha−1 of available N, and 2.14–0.87 kg ha−1 of available P. Weed strips and weed mulch on the upstream side of maize rows in T5 led to formation of stable mini-terraces promoting better plant and root growth. This study indicates cover management involving selective weed retention can reduce soil erosion, favourably modify land slope and promotes soil productivity. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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