Title:
Soil Health, Energy Budget, and Rice Productivity as Influenced by Cow Products Application With Fertilizers Under South Asian Eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains Zone

dc.contributor.authorPravin Kumar Upadhyay
dc.contributor.authorAvijit Sen
dc.contributor.authorYashwant Singh
dc.contributor.authorRam Kumar Singh
dc.contributor.authorSaroj Kumar Prasad
dc.contributor.authorArdith Sankar
dc.contributor.authorVinod Kumar Singh
dc.contributor.authorS.K. Dutta
dc.contributor.authorRakesh Kumar
dc.contributor.authorSanjay Singh Rathore
dc.contributor.authorKapila Shekhawat
dc.contributor.authorSubhash Babu
dc.contributor.authorRajiv Kumar Singh
dc.contributor.authorBipin Kumar
dc.contributor.authorAbir Dey
dc.contributor.authorG.A. Rajanna
dc.contributor.authorRamesh Kulshekaran
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-07T11:05:30Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.description.abstractThe comprehensive use of organic, inorganic, and biological components of nutrient management in rice ecologies can potentially address the twin challenges of declining factor productivity and deteriorating soil health. A field study was thus conducted at Varanasi, India during the year 2013–14 and 2014–15 to assess the effect of the recommended dose of fertilizers (RDF) along with cow product (blends of 5 cow by-products i.e., dung, ghee, curd, urine, and milk that is known as panchagavya) on soil health, energy budget, and rice productivity. The results revealed that the inclusion of panchagavya as seedling root dip + 6% spray at 30 days after transplanting (DAT) + an application with irrigation water (15 l ha−1) at 60 DAT (D4) along with 100% RDF (F3) noted significantly higher rice grain yield (6.34 t ha−1) and higher dehydrogenase activity. However, the soil bacterial and actinomycetes population, soil microbial biomass carbon (SMBC), urease, and alkaline phosphatase activities were significantly higher with D4 along with 120% RDF (F4). Carbon output (5,608 kg CO2 eq ha−1), energy use parameters viz. energy output (187,867 MJ ha−1), net energy returns (164,319 MJ ha−1), and energy intensity valuation (5.08 MJ (Figure presented.)) were significantly higher under F4. However, the energy ratio (8.68), energy productivity (0.292 kg MJ−1), and energy profitability (7.68) remained highest with 80% RDF (F2), while the highest carbohydrate equivalent yield (4,641 kg mha−1) was produced under F3. The combination of F3 with D4 resulted in the highest productivity, optimum energy balance, and maintaining soil quality. Therefore, a judicious combination of cow product (panchagavya) with RDF was found to improve the rice productivity, energy profitability, and soil quality under south Asian eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains (IGPs). Copyright © 2022 Upadhyay, Sen, Singh, Singh, Prasad, Sankar, Singh, Dutta, Kumar, Rathore, Shekhawat, Babu, Singh, Kumar, Dey, Rajanna and Kulshekaran.
dc.identifier.doi10.3389/fagro.2021.758572
dc.identifier.issn26733218
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.3389/fagro.2021.758572
dc.identifier.urihttps://dl.bhu.ac.in/bhuir/handle/123456789/41908
dc.publisherFrontiers Media S.A.
dc.subjectcarbohydrate equivalent
dc.subjectdehydrogenase
dc.subjectenergy
dc.subjectmicrobial population
dc.subjectpanchagavya
dc.subjectSMBC
dc.subjecturease
dc.titleSoil Health, Energy Budget, and Rice Productivity as Influenced by Cow Products Application With Fertilizers Under South Asian Eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains Zone
dc.typePublication
dspace.entity.typeArticle

Files

Collections