Enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient management

Agricultural land in Pakistan is decreasing due to development of infrastructure and in order to feed its masses, agricultural activities are shifting towards sloping land where soil loss through surface runoff process is the sternest ecological threat to sustainable agriculture. Improving soil fe...

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Main Authors: Murad Ali, Farmanullah Khan, Subhanullah, Wiqar Ahmad, Muhammad Ishaq, Muhammad Saeed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Soil Science Society of Pakistan (SSSP) 2018-06-01
Series:Soil & Environment
Subjects:
Online Access:http://se.org.pk/File-Download.aspx?archivedpaperid=820
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spelling doaj-24d50cb5f9404855bfe990b40e734e022020-11-25T02:33:23ZengSoil Science Society of Pakistan (SSSP)Soil & Environment2074-95462075-11412018-06-01371212710.25252/SE/18/61450Enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient managementMurad Ali0Farmanullah Khan1Subhanullah2Wiqar Ahmad3Muhammad Ishaq4Muhammad Saeed5Cereal Crops Research Institute (CCRI), Pirsabak Nowshera, KPK, PakistanDepartment of Soil & Environmentạl Sciences, The Univẹrsity of Agriculturẹ, PeshawarCereal Crops Research Institute (CCRI), Pirsabak Nowshera, KPK, PakistanDepartment of Soil & Environmentạl Sciences, The Univẹrsity of Agriculturẹ, AMK Campus Mardan, PakistanCereal Crops Research Institute (CCRI), Pirsabak Nowshera, KPK, PakistanCereal Crops Research Institute (CCRI), Pirsabak Nowshera, KPK, PakistanAgricultural land in Pakistan is decreasing due to development of infrastructure and in order to feed its masses, agricultural activities are shifting towards sloping land where soil loss through surface runoff process is the sternest ecological threat to sustainable agriculture. Improving soil fertility and crop productivity through integrated nutrients management (INM) is a globally accepted practice. The reported study was conducted during 2014-15 for field investigations in the improvement of eroded soil’s physical characteristics and crop productivity using integrated nutrients management techniques. The treatments contained combinations of NPK (% of recommended dose 120:90:60 kg NPK ḥa-1), FYM (t ha-1) and Poultry manure PM (t ha-1) respectively as; 0:0:0, 100%:0:0, 0:20:0, 25%:15:0, 50%:10:0, 75%:5:0, 0:0:10, 25:0:7.5, 50%:0:5, 75%:0:2.5, 0:5:2.5, 25%:5:2.5, 50%:5:2.5, 75%:5:2.5. Results revealed that 50%:5:2.5 combination of nutrient sources significantly (p ≤ 0.05) improved spike m-2 (by 34%), grains spike-1 (by 38%) and grain yield (by 90%) over the control treatment. Regarding soil physical properties, 0:20:0 combination reduced soil bulk density while improving available water, organic matter content and saturation water percentage at 0-15 cm soil depth. Positive correlation of soil organic matter was observed with available water holding capacity (ṙ = 0.92) and saturation percentage (ṙ = 0.93) while negatively co-related with ṣoil bulk density (ṙ = -0.96). It was concluded that chemical fertilizer’s improvement in physical properties of eroded soil and the resultant production was significantly lagging behind that achieved with integrated nutrient management. Under the current experimental conditions, 50%:5:2.5 combination of nutrient sources application restituted the physical properties of eroded soil and showed asset over rest of the INM and their unshared applications.http://se.org.pk/File-Download.aspx?archivedpaperid=820Available waterbulk densityintegrated nutrient managementorganicinorganic fertilizerssaturation percentage
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Murad Ali
Farmanullah Khan
Subhanullah
Wiqar Ahmad
Muhammad Ishaq
Muhammad Saeed
spellingShingle Murad Ali
Farmanullah Khan
Subhanullah
Wiqar Ahmad
Muhammad Ishaq
Muhammad Saeed
Enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient management
Soil & Environment
Available water
bulk density
integrated nutrient management
organic
inorganic fertilizers
saturation percentage
author_facet Murad Ali
Farmanullah Khan
Subhanullah
Wiqar Ahmad
Muhammad Ishaq
Muhammad Saeed
author_sort Murad Ali
title Enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient management
title_short Enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient management
title_full Enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient management
title_fullStr Enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient management
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient management
title_sort enhancing wheat productivity and soil physical properties of water eroded agricultural land through integrated nutrient management
publisher Soil Science Society of Pakistan (SSSP)
series Soil & Environment
issn 2074-9546
2075-1141
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Agricultural land in Pakistan is decreasing due to development of infrastructure and in order to feed its masses, agricultural activities are shifting towards sloping land where soil loss through surface runoff process is the sternest ecological threat to sustainable agriculture. Improving soil fertility and crop productivity through integrated nutrients management (INM) is a globally accepted practice. The reported study was conducted during 2014-15 for field investigations in the improvement of eroded soil’s physical characteristics and crop productivity using integrated nutrients management techniques. The treatments contained combinations of NPK (% of recommended dose 120:90:60 kg NPK ḥa-1), FYM (t ha-1) and Poultry manure PM (t ha-1) respectively as; 0:0:0, 100%:0:0, 0:20:0, 25%:15:0, 50%:10:0, 75%:5:0, 0:0:10, 25:0:7.5, 50%:0:5, 75%:0:2.5, 0:5:2.5, 25%:5:2.5, 50%:5:2.5, 75%:5:2.5. Results revealed that 50%:5:2.5 combination of nutrient sources significantly (p ≤ 0.05) improved spike m-2 (by 34%), grains spike-1 (by 38%) and grain yield (by 90%) over the control treatment. Regarding soil physical properties, 0:20:0 combination reduced soil bulk density while improving available water, organic matter content and saturation water percentage at 0-15 cm soil depth. Positive correlation of soil organic matter was observed with available water holding capacity (ṙ = 0.92) and saturation percentage (ṙ = 0.93) while negatively co-related with ṣoil bulk density (ṙ = -0.96). It was concluded that chemical fertilizer’s improvement in physical properties of eroded soil and the resultant production was significantly lagging behind that achieved with integrated nutrient management. Under the current experimental conditions, 50%:5:2.5 combination of nutrient sources application restituted the physical properties of eroded soil and showed asset over rest of the INM and their unshared applications.
topic Available water
bulk density
integrated nutrient management
organic
inorganic fertilizers
saturation percentage
url http://se.org.pk/File-Download.aspx?archivedpaperid=820
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AT farmanullahkhan enhancingwheatproductivityandsoilphysicalpropertiesofwatererodedagriculturallandthroughintegratednutrientmanagement
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