Conservation Agricultural Practices for Improving Crop Production and Quality
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2025Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (268 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783725836451
- 9783725836468
- Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects
- Research and information: general
- Mathematics and Science
- Biology, life sciences
- Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes
- AOX
- Solanum pennellii
- additional nitrogen
- adoption
- air temperature
- antioxidant capacity
- arid region
- biofuels
- biological properties
- biomass
- bulk density
- cereal yield
- chemical properties
- climate-smart crop production
- conservation agriculture
- conservative agriculture
- conventional tillage
- cover crop
- cover crops
- crop yield
- durum wheat quality
- ecotype
- environment
- experience
- farmer survey
- forage sorghum
- fruit quality
- gluten
- grain yield
- inorganic fertilizers
- introgression lines (ILs)
- knowledge gap
- management
- micronutrients
- multiple harvests system
- nitrogen fertilizer
- no-till
- no-tillage direct seeding
- nutritional value
- photosynthetic capacity
- physical properties
- productivity
- profitability
- reduced tillage
- relative humidity of air
- rice root system
- rice varieties
- rice–wheat–green gram
- root sustainability
- saline soil
- saline–sodic rice area
- salinity stress
- short-term effects
- slow-release fertilizers
- soil compaction
- soil conservation
- soil fertility management
- soil health
- soil moisture content
- soil physicochemical prop
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In crop production, the conventional management of agroecosystems often leads to a reduction in soil quality and alters the soil processes involved in providing many ecosystem services. Intensive tillage, combined with high-mineral fertilization, increases the mineralization of organic carbon in the soil, thereby contributing to an increase in greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere. Conservation agriculture (CA) may be the answer to these threats. CA is a crop and soil management practice for sustainable agriculture, defined by three related principles: minimum tillage and soil disturbance, permanent organic soil cover, and diversified crop rotations. Adherence to these principles improves soil quality, optimizes yields, and reduces production costs. Conservation practices help minimize soil erosion, directly increase CO2 sequestration in the soil due to increased organic matter, improve the efficiency of water capture and use, stimulate internal C and N cycling, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. CA's success is driven by component technologies such as water, weed, and nutrient management strategies to support crops under reduced tillage conditions.
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