Soil carbon stocks in natural and man-made agri-hortisilvipastural land use systems in dry zones of Southern India


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Authors

  • M. S. NAGARAJA
  • A. K. BHARDWAJ
  • G.V. P. REDDY
  • V.R. R. PARAMA
  • B. KAPHALIYA

Keywords:

Soil carbon, land use systems, residue recycling, forest, horticulture, grassland

Abstract

A study was undertaken to assess the soil carbon stocks in 0-50 cm soil depth, under natural and man-made land use systems in the eastern dry zones of Karnataka in India. The carbon (C) stocks in soils ranged from 26.46 t ha-1 in dry land agricultural systems (without manure) to 89.20 t ha-1 in a mixed forest. Among natural systems, mixed forest (89.20 t ha-1) and ungrazed grassland (71.78 t ha-1) recorded higher levels of C stock than other systems, while grazing in grassland and litter removal in teak plantations correlated to reduced carbon stocks to 39.32 and 32.74 t ha-1, respectively. Intensively managed horticultural systems namely, grapes plantation (85.52 t ha-1) and pomegranate plantation (78.78 t ha-1) maintained higher levels of C stock. However, agricultural systems recorded moderate to lower levels. Total carbon stocks in top 0-50 cm soils of agricultural systems was in the order: irrigated lands with manure application (52.77 t ha-1) > irrigated lands without manure application (44.47 t ha-1) > dry lands with manure application (37.79 t ha-1) > dry lands without manure application (26.46 t ha-1). It was observed that adoption of appropriate soil and crop management practices such as conservation tillage, good irrigation, incorporation of crop residues and application of manure etc. could enhance soil C pool by reducing existing carbon loss and promoting C accumulation in the soil.

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Submitted

2020-12-14

Published

2020-12-14

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

NAGARAJA, M. S., BHARDWAJ, A. K., REDDY, G. P., PARAMA, V. R., & KAPHALIYA, B. (2020). Soil carbon stocks in natural and man-made agri-hortisilvipastural land use systems in dry zones of Southern India. Journal of Soil and Water Conservation, 15(3). https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/JSWC/article/view/108483