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Sustainable System of Farming for Modern Agriculture

R.D. Gupta, S.K. Gupta, Anil Mahajan
  • Country of Origin:

  • Imprint:

    NIPA

  • eISBN:

    9789395319553

  • Binding:

    EBook

  • Language:

    English

Individual Price: 5,995.00 INR 5,395.50 INR + Tax

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Towards a sustainable agriculture: An intervention tool for eco-friendly approach in modern era contains many sustainable issues which have been discussed thoroughly. It explores the vital role of many national and international issues pertaining to soil tillage, watershed, organic farming, integrated nutrient management (INM) system, biofertilizer, vermicomposting, earthworms-role in sustainable agriculture, checking crop pests naturally-noble way to sustain agriculture, role of rural women, farm worm, agroforestry, management of waste lands.

The book provides new alternatives to sustain productivity of Jhum Cultivation - myths and reality. Importance of micronutrients and application of extension system approach for sustaining food grain production have also been dealt in separate chapters. 

Secondly this book will prove a boon for the scientists, extension personnels, teachers and students, who are involved in conducting applied and basic research in various aspects of agricultural production on sustainable basis.  

0 Start Pages

Grow ìmore food campaignî which was later on designated as ìGreen Revolutionî. In India, the ìGreen Revolutionî, which came to fore during 1967- 68, resulted from introduction of high yielding varieties of rice and wheat crops. High yielding varieties of rice and wheat responded to more use of fertilizers, water and pesticides. This Green Revolution gave an impression of grand success for 2-3 decades.

 
1 Introduction

India is an agriculture based country which is one of the few developing countries in the world. It successfully achieved Green Revolution during the late 1960s (1967-68). At present, agriculture is a principal means of livelihood for over 58.4 per cent of Indiaís population directly or indirectly (Anonymous, 2011). It is worthwhile to mention that although agriculture continued to be the mainstay of the Indian economy previously (Anonymous, 2010b) yet now its share in the Indian economy is declining year after year (Anonymous 2013d). After Independence, agricultureís sector contribution to GDP swings between 50-60 per cent. Even in 1950-51, it was 55.1 per cent, but fell to mere 17-18 per cent in 2008-09 (Mahajan and Gupta, 2009).

1 - 16 (16 Pages)
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2 Concept of Sustainable Agriculture

Agricultural production has made rapid strides in the past four to five decades and has enabled India to achieve self-sufficiency in food grain production. This was only through ìGreen Revolutionî which ushered during 1967-68 onwards, when use of old agricultural practices were mostly done away with. Neglect of old or indigenous agricultural practices such as use of organic manures (farm yard manure - FYM, compost, green manure), cultural control methods like sanitation, tillage/removal of weeds, adjusting sowing/harvesting time crop rotation, trap crops, water and fertilizer management and host plant resistance, and use of plant based insecticides like neem or nim (Azadirachta indica), drek (Azadirachta indica), nirgudhi or bana (Vitex negundo) vis-a-vis biological control measures, has resulted in outbreak of ill-effects in human beings and animals through contaminated food stuffs (Gupta, 2006a).

17 - 36 (20 Pages)
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3 Soil Tillage Essential Component for Sustaining Crop Productivity

In modern times, soil tillage has emerged as an integral part of a crop system. Soil tillage or soil surface management has been found important in alleviating soil related constraints encountered in crop production. An important effect of soil tillage on crop productivity is through its influence on soil processes, soil Soil Tillage 39 properties and crop growth. At the same time, soil tillage has its impact on the environment e.g. soil degradation, water quality, emission of green house gases from soil related processes etc.

37 - 60 (24 Pages)
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4 Water - A Key to Agriculture Sustainability and Food Security

Water is precious, but it is a finite natural resource. Although it accounts for about three-fourth of the earthís surface yet very small fraction of it i.e., only 2.7 per cent of the global water is available as fresh water. Around 2.8 billion people live in areas of high water scarcity (Anonymous, 2014d). Out of the total amount of the fresh available water merely 30 per cent is withdrawn to meet the water requirements of the human and livestock population while the remaining 70 per cent is required to produce food crops that fuel human activities.

61 - 80 (20 Pages)
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5 Watershed Concept and Management

Now-a-days, a watershed management or watershed development has been fully recognized as a unit for over all development of rainfed areas (Gupta, 2006a and b). Hydrological problems such as excessive runoff, large scale soil erosion, inadequate or faulty drainage and occurrence of droughts are the most significant problems in almost all the rainfed areas. These problems, however, can be alleviated through running watershed based development programmes that recognize the natural topography and water movement patterns of the land.

81 - 102 (22 Pages)
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6 Organic Farming for Sustainable Agriculture

There is no doubt that after independence, particularly during 1966-68, the use of hybrid and composite seeds of various crops, chemical fertilizers and pesticides resulted in an increase in the Indian agricultural output leading to ìGreen Revolutionî. But quite soon, the deleterious effects of farming based on chemical Organic Farming for Sustainable Agriculture 105 methods came to fore.

103 - 140 (38 Pages)
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7 Integrated Nutrient Management (INM) System and Sustainable Agriculture

Today a number of countries have moved away from the inorganic or chemicalised farming to organic farming yet it is not possible for India to depend entirely upon this system of farming due to increase in human population. As total availability of plant nutrients from different organic sources is projected to 7.75 MT by 2025 against the total requirement of 37.50 MT for 1504 million populations, so it means if we depend on organic sources there would be deficiency of about 30 million tonnes of nutrients.

141 - 170 (30 Pages)
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8 Use of Bio-Fertilizers in Sustainable Agriculture

Bio-fertilizers, as the name indicates, are the fertilizers of biological origin (Gupta, 2012). In strict sense, real bio-fertilizers are green manures and organics - materials of biological origin which are added to supply plant nutrients present in them. However, in restricted scope, the term ìbio-fertilizersî or ìmicrobial inoculantsî are preparations of living organisms in alone or in combination, which may help in increasing crop productivity by way of fixing atmospheric Use of Bio-Fertilizers in Sustainable Agriculture 175 nitrogen in soils, solubilizing of insoluble plant nutrients, stimulating plant growth or decomposing of plant residues. 

171 - 240 (70 Pages)
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9 Vermicompost/Earthwormís Role in Sustainable Agriculture

Ever increasing use of chemical fertilizers without an adequate organics has deteriorated the fertility and productivity of soil and also aggravated multi-nutrient deficiencies in soil and plant system (Gupta and Singh, 2006). Further, change in the cropping pattern, intensive cultivation and indiscriminate use of pesticides with an objective to obtain more and more crop yield, has not only made agriculture a profitable commercial venture but has also brought in several problems of pests and diseases, and ecological crises. As the nitrogenous fertilizers are soluble and as such they may leach down into ground water as for example presence of nitrate in underground waters of some parts of UP, Haryana, Punjab, Gujarat, has become a potent source of blue baby disease (Gupta, 2005).

241 - 260 (20 Pages)
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10 Checking the Crop Pests Naturally A Novel Way to Sustain Agriculture

The term pesticide includes fungicides, bactericides, nematicides, rodenticides, soil fumigants and herbicides. They cover a wide range of formulations: chlorinated hydrocarbons, organophosphates, metallic salts, acetic acid derivatives, thiocarbamates etc. They all have deleterious effects on humans, domestic animals, wildlife and plants.

261 - 284 (24 Pages)
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11 Rural Women Role in Sustainable Agriculture

Agriculture is the main stay of Indian economy as more than 60 per cent of the people of India are dependent upon this evocation and allied disciplines for their livelihood. Even today, at the dawn of 21st century, the Indian agriculture has continued to be the backbone of our National economy, representing countryís about one seventh of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Thus, farming families consisting both of men and women, boys and girls, known as the pillars of our agriculture constitutes backbone of the Nation. The support and contributors made by the rural women in agriculture, consisting 50-60 per cent of farm work force are, however, not less than those performed by the men, and therefore they become spine of the rural economy.

285 - 304 (20 Pages)
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12 Role of Agroforestry in Sustainable Agriculture

In spite of the fact that the forests are the wealth of a nation and play a vital role in the economy of the country, not much attention has been paid to their promotion, protection and conservation. The forests of India have been reduced to 19.27 per cent (Gupta and Khajuria, 2000) and/or 23 per cent including 20.55 per cent forest cover and 2.48 tree cover (Sharma, 2005). It is much less than as prescribed in the National Forest Policy (1952), according to which onethird i.e. 33 per cent of the total land area of the country must be under forest.

305 - 324 (20 Pages)
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14 Indigenous Technological Knowledge Concept and Importance in Sustainable Agriculture

The concept of indigenous knowledge or indigenous knowledge system (IKS) delineates a cognitive structure in which theories and perceptions of nature and culture are conceptualized. Thus, it includes definitions, classifications and concepts of the physical, natural, social land economic environments. The dynamics of IKS takes places on two different levels, the cognitive and empirical. On the empirical levels, IKS is visible in institutions, artifacts and technologies.

325 - 350 (26 Pages)
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15 Management of Wastelands

In whole of the world, about 6 to 7 m ha of agricultural land is becoming unproductive every year due to one or the other reasons (Gupta, 2018a). This is, however, more so in case of developing countries (Gupta, 2003). Productive lands are utmost important to meet the countryís growing needs for food, fodder, fuel wood, medicinal herbs and timber.

351 - 376 (26 Pages)
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16 Some Alternatives to Sustain Productivity of ìJhumî Cultivation

North Eastern Himalayan Region comprises mostly of seven states viz. Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland and Tripura (Gill, 2005). This Himalayan Region stands entirely different from the rest of the country not only in language, dress, food habits and festivals but also differs in agricultural practices. Among agricultural practices shifting cultivation locally known as ìJhumî or ìBunî is the most important. According to Ministry of Agriculture, Arunachal Pradesh stands first in the ìJhumî cultivation followed by Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya (Agnihotri, 2003). In Meghalaya, the problem has assumed an epidemic proportion in Gargo hills where tracts of forests are burnt. The farmers of Khasi and Jainta Hills usually practise the ìBunî cultivation.

377 - 392 (16 Pages)
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17 Importance of Micro-nutrients in Sustainable Agriculture

It is an established fact that there is no further scope for horizontal expansion of area under plough, as the per capita land is decreasing every year due to unabated increase in human population. Hence, the future need of food has to be met through vertical expansion i.e. more intensification of agriculture. Nearly 40 million tonnes of nutrients in the form of chemical fertilizers will have to be utilized to feed upon an estimated population of 1.5 billion by 2050 AD (Sakai, 2001). However, presently the crop productivity especially rice and wheat has stagnated not only in India but in other South Asian countries also (Mahajan and Gupta, 2009). 

393 - 420 (28 Pages)
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18 Agriculture Production on Sustainable Basis Through Extension System Approach

Agriculture is the lifeline of India that provides livelihood to about 70 per cent of its population dwelling in about 6 lakh villages. In spite of so many projects, programmes and schemes launched from time to time after independence by Government of India through Ministry of Agriculture and Indian Council of Agricultural Research, State Agricultural Universities and Departments of Agriculture, agricultural food grains production was not realized on ìsustainable basisî. Even ìGreen Revolutionî which came to fore during 1967-68 in the irrigated areas alone, could not sustain the productivity of rice and wheat. Rather, the productivity of these crops has either got declined in many cases and/or in other cases it has stagnated.

421 - 438 (18 Pages)
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19 End Pages

Appendix A List of Indian Magazines Related to this Book

 
20 End Pages

A brief about earthworms 243 Absorption 87, 128, 155, 223, 298, 388

 
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