Impact of regenerative farming practices on soil quality and yield of cotton-sorghum system in semi arid Indian conditions

Janaki Ponnusamy, Lalid Kumar Santhy Poongavanam,Parameswari Ettiyagounder, Monicaa Murugesan, Krishnan Ramanujam, Sunitha Rangasamy,Suganthy Mariappan, Kavitha P. Shanmugam

Environmental Monitoring and Assessment(2024)

Cited 0|Views4
No score
Abstract
Regenerative agricultural practices, i.e. organic and natural farming, are rooted in India since ancient times. However, the high cost of production, lack of organic pest control measures and premium price of organic produces in chemical agriculture encourage natural farming. In the present study, the quality improvement of calcareous soils under organic (OGF) and natural (NTF) management was compared with integrated conventional (ICF) and non-invasive (NIF) farming practices with cotton-sorghum crops over three consecutive years. A total of 23 soil attributes were analyzed at the end of the third cropping cycle and subjected to principal component analysis (PCA) to select a minimum data set (MDS) and obtain a soil quality index (SQI). The attributes soil organic carbon (SOC), available Fe, pH, bulk density (BD) and alkaline phosphatase (APA) were selected as indicators based on correlations and expert opinions on the lime content of the experimental soil. The SQI was improved in the order of OGF (0.89) > NTF(0.69) > ICF(0.48) > NIF(0.05). The contribution of the indicators to SQI was in the order of available Fe (17–44
More
Translated text
Key words
Organic,Natural farming,Calcareous soil,Conventional practice,Continuous cropping,Soil quality index
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined