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Soil organic carbon pools and productivity in relation to nutrient management in a 20-year-old rice–berseem agroecosystem

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Abstract

Labile fractions of soil organic C (SOC) can respond rapidly to changes in C supply and are considered to be important indicators of soil quality. An attempt is made in this paper to investigate into the dynamics of total organic C (C tot), oxidisable organic C (C oc), very labile C (C frac 1), labile C (C frac 2), less labile C (C frac 3), non-labile C (C frac 4), microbial biomass C (C mic), mineralizable C (C min) and particulate organic C (C p) in relation to the system productivity of a 20-year-old rice (Oryza sativa L)–berseem (Trifolium alexandrium L) cropping system with different management strategies [no fertilization, only NPK and NPK + FYM (farmyard manure) applied in different seasons] in the hot humid, subtropics of India. Cultivation over the years caused a net decrease, while balanced fertilization with NPK maintained the SOC. About 62% of the C applied as FYM was stabilized into SOC. The passive pool (C frac 3 + C frac 4) constituted about 55% of the C tot. A larger proportion (63%) of applied C was stabilized in the passive pool of SOC. Of the analysed pools, C frac 1, C mic, C p and C min were influenced most by the treatments imposed and explained higher per cent variability in the yield of the crops.

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Acknowledgements

Authors are extremely grateful to Dr. L.N. Mandal, former Professor of Soil Science, Bidhan Chandra Krishi Viswavidyalaya, West Bengal for reviewing the draft manuscript. They are also thankful to Dr. S. Kundu, Vivekananda Parvatiya Krishi Anusandhan Sansthan, Almora for helping analysis of C by CHN analyser, and to the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, New Delhi for funding the work through the World Bank-assisted multi-institutional collaborative National Agricultural Technology Project.

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Correspondence to P. K. Bandyopadhyay.

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Majumder, B., Mandal, B. & Bandyopadhyay, P.K. Soil organic carbon pools and productivity in relation to nutrient management in a 20-year-old rice–berseem agroecosystem. Biol Fertil Soils 44, 451–461 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-007-0226-6

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-007-0226-6

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