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Impact of Integrated Management on Yield Sustainability in Relation to Soil Quality Under a Rice–Wheat Cropping System

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Impact of Integrated Management on Yield Sustainability in Relation to Soil Quality Under a Rice–Wheat Cropping System. / Bhaduri, Debarati; Purakayastha, T. J.; Bhar, L. M. et al.
In: National Academy Science Letters, Vol. 37, No. 1, 28.02.2014, p. 25-31.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Bhaduri, D, Purakayastha, TJ, Bhar, LM, Patra, AK & Sarkar, B 2014, 'Impact of Integrated Management on Yield Sustainability in Relation to Soil Quality Under a Rice–Wheat Cropping System', National Academy Science Letters, vol. 37, no. 1, pp. 25-31. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40009-013-0202-7

APA

Bhaduri, D., Purakayastha, T. J., Bhar, L. M., Patra, A. K., & Sarkar, B. (2014). Impact of Integrated Management on Yield Sustainability in Relation to Soil Quality Under a Rice–Wheat Cropping System. National Academy Science Letters, 37(1), 25-31. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40009-013-0202-7

Vancouver

Bhaduri D, Purakayastha TJ, Bhar LM, Patra AK, Sarkar B. Impact of Integrated Management on Yield Sustainability in Relation to Soil Quality Under a Rice–Wheat Cropping System. National Academy Science Letters. 2014 Feb 28;37(1):25-31. Epub 2014 Feb 15. doi: 10.1007/s40009-013-0202-7

Author

Bhaduri, Debarati ; Purakayastha, T. J. ; Bhar, L. M. et al. / Impact of Integrated Management on Yield Sustainability in Relation to Soil Quality Under a Rice–Wheat Cropping System. In: National Academy Science Letters. 2014 ; Vol. 37, No. 1. pp. 25-31.

Bibtex

@article{e0a82aca9219432fa94e3074cb7d5e73,
title = "Impact of Integrated Management on Yield Sustainability in Relation to Soil Quality Under a Rice–Wheat Cropping System",
abstract = "This study concentrates on developing a soil quality index (SQI), linking productivity to soil quality indicators, and SQI using grain yield of rice and wheat grown in a sequence for 8 years in an integrated tillage-water-nutrient management system. Rice yield was significantly better under puddling, 3 days of drainage, and both 150 % NPK and 100 % NPK + FYM treatments, and the yields were positively correlated with bulk density (BD), available Fe and soil respiration. The wheat yield was significantly higher under conventional tillage, five lots of irrigation, and 150 % NPK, and was positively correlated with BD, water stable aggregates (WSA) and available N. However, it was negatively correlated with mean weight diameter, soil organic carbon and hydraulic conductivity. Stepwise regression identified available Fe, WSA and microbial biomass carbon as the most important indicators that explained 42 % variability in rice yield, which further correlated significantly with the PCA-based SQI (r = +0.44). Thus, crop yield emerged as an important indicator for maintaining soil quality to sustain high productivity under integrated management systems.",
author = "Debarati Bhaduri and Purakayastha, {T. J.} and Bhar, {L. M.} and Patra, {A. K.} and Binoy Sarkar",
year = "2014",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1007/s40009-013-0202-7",
language = "English",
volume = "37",
pages = "25--31",
journal = "National Academy Science Letters",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Impact of Integrated Management on Yield Sustainability in Relation to Soil Quality Under a Rice–Wheat Cropping System

AU - Bhaduri, Debarati

AU - Purakayastha, T. J.

AU - Bhar, L. M.

AU - Patra, A. K.

AU - Sarkar, Binoy

PY - 2014/2/28

Y1 - 2014/2/28

N2 - This study concentrates on developing a soil quality index (SQI), linking productivity to soil quality indicators, and SQI using grain yield of rice and wheat grown in a sequence for 8 years in an integrated tillage-water-nutrient management system. Rice yield was significantly better under puddling, 3 days of drainage, and both 150 % NPK and 100 % NPK + FYM treatments, and the yields were positively correlated with bulk density (BD), available Fe and soil respiration. The wheat yield was significantly higher under conventional tillage, five lots of irrigation, and 150 % NPK, and was positively correlated with BD, water stable aggregates (WSA) and available N. However, it was negatively correlated with mean weight diameter, soil organic carbon and hydraulic conductivity. Stepwise regression identified available Fe, WSA and microbial biomass carbon as the most important indicators that explained 42 % variability in rice yield, which further correlated significantly with the PCA-based SQI (r = +0.44). Thus, crop yield emerged as an important indicator for maintaining soil quality to sustain high productivity under integrated management systems.

AB - This study concentrates on developing a soil quality index (SQI), linking productivity to soil quality indicators, and SQI using grain yield of rice and wheat grown in a sequence for 8 years in an integrated tillage-water-nutrient management system. Rice yield was significantly better under puddling, 3 days of drainage, and both 150 % NPK and 100 % NPK + FYM treatments, and the yields were positively correlated with bulk density (BD), available Fe and soil respiration. The wheat yield was significantly higher under conventional tillage, five lots of irrigation, and 150 % NPK, and was positively correlated with BD, water stable aggregates (WSA) and available N. However, it was negatively correlated with mean weight diameter, soil organic carbon and hydraulic conductivity. Stepwise regression identified available Fe, WSA and microbial biomass carbon as the most important indicators that explained 42 % variability in rice yield, which further correlated significantly with the PCA-based SQI (r = +0.44). Thus, crop yield emerged as an important indicator for maintaining soil quality to sustain high productivity under integrated management systems.

UR - http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=ORCID&SrcApp=OrcidOrg&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS_CPL&KeyUT=WOS:000331973600005&KeyUID=WOS:000331973600005

U2 - 10.1007/s40009-013-0202-7

DO - 10.1007/s40009-013-0202-7

M3 - Journal article

VL - 37

SP - 25

EP - 31

JO - National Academy Science Letters

JF - National Academy Science Letters

IS - 1

ER -