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1.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 65, 2024 Jan 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38167531

RESUMO

An insight into the dynamics of soil phosphorus (P) pools with long-term cropping/management practices would help in designing efficient and sustainable management module(s). The study aimed to investigate the long-term impact of diversified rice-based rotations and variable nutrient management practices on the dynamic composition of P pools and their influence on systems' base-crop productivity in an alkaline soil of Indo-Gangetic plain (Fluvisol). Treatments consisted of four rotations [rice-wheat (R-W), rice-wheat-mungbean (R-W-Mb), rice-wheat-rice-chickpea (R-W-R-C), rice-chickpea (R-C)] each with three nutrient treatments [control (CT), integrated nutrient management (INM), sole-chemical fertilizers (CF)]. Notably, R-C exhibited higher levels of bioavailable-P (soluble-P, Ca2-P, labile-Po), particularly in subsurface soil depth (0.2-0.4 m) compared to other rotations. Likewise, the inclusion of chickpea every alternate year (R-W-R-C) resulted in higher Ca2-P (40%), labile-Pi (15%), labile-Po (11%), and moderately labile Po (8%) compared to R-W rotation demonstrating an increased significance of chickpea in maintaining a favorable soil P regime in alkaline soil. Both R-C and R-W-R-C reduced the surface-to-subsurface depth ratio (SSBR) of soluble-P and Ca2-P while increasing the ratio for microbial biomass P. Even with a suboptimal fertilizer-P rate, INM significantly increased soluble-P (4-33%), labile-Po (13-17%), microbial biomass P (10-26%), moderately labile-Po (4-17%) compared to CF and exhibited higher SSBR values. Correlation analysis demonstrated the substantial influence of very-labile carbon, microbial and phosphatase activities on P availability. The treatment-induced changes in labile-P pools significantly influenced rice (base-crop) yields. In conclusion, chickpea-inclusive diversification and INM could be a sustainable approach to enhance P bioavailability and crop productivity in tropical rice soils.

2.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 6508, 2023 Apr 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37081033

RESUMO

Mono-cropping of maize-wheat, mechanical disintegration of soils, and continuous chemical fertilization have deteriorated soil health in the Indo-Gangetic Plains. We studied the long-term impact of pulse-based cropping systems with integrated nutrient management on soil physical and chemical properties and yield sustainability. We evaluated four different cropping systems: (1) maize-wheat (M-W), (2) maize-wheat-mungbean (M-W-Mb), (3) maize-wheat-maize-chickpea (M-W-M-C), (4) pigeonpea-wheat (P-W) each with three degrees of soil fertilization techniques: (1) unfertilized control (CT), (2) inorganic fertilization (RDF), and (3) integrated nutrient management (INM). The field experiment was undertaken in a split-plot design with three replications each year with a fixed layout. P-W and M-W-Mb systems enhanced soil properties such as volume expansion by 9-25% and porosity by 7-9% (p < 0.05) more than M-W, respectively. P-W and M-W-Mb increased soil organic carbon by 25-42% and 12-50% over M-W (RDF). P-W system enhanced water holding capacity and gravimetric moisture content by 10 and 11% (p < 0.05) than M-W. Pulse-based systems (P-W and M-W-Mb) had higher available nitrogen (8-11%), phosphorus (42-73%), and potassium (8-12%) over M-W (p < 0.05). M-W-Mb increased 26% maize yield and 21% wheat yield over M-W (p < 0.05) at the thirteenth crop cycle. P-W system had a higher sustainable yield index (p < 0.05) of wheat over the M-W. Thus, pulse inclusion in the cropping system in combination with INM can enhance physical and chemical properties vis-à-vis sustainable yield index over the cereal-cereal system.

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