S. Bhuyan, D. K. Patgiri, B. K. Medhi, B. Deka, G. G. Kandali, S. J. Medhi, S. Kalidas-Singh, A. Debnath, R. R. Zhiipao, T. Tsomu, S. R. Devegowda, M. Sandillya
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Prediction of soil quality index is one of the suitable options to determine the productivity of a cropping system. Rice based cropping systems are the most important cropping systems followed in the North Bank Plain region. The productivity of such system has declined continuously due to deterioration of soil quality. The current study was carried out in Cambisols soil to establish soil quality index based on soil physical and chemical properties and identify quality indicators from the rice cropping system. A total of 180 geo-referenced surface soil samples were collected from five rice based cropping systems. The principal components analysis and machine learning model were used to screen the minimum data set indicators for computing the soil quality index. The minimum data set indicators were found as cation exchange capacity, micro aggregate, organic carbon, total porosity and available phosphorus. The SQI for the district ranged from 0.48 to 0.87, with an average of 0.62. The SQI was more significantly positively correlated with the rice equivalent yield of rice potato-based cropping systems, followed by rice rabi vegetables. The spatial variability of the SQI was presented on the geographical information system (GIS) platform through inverse distance weighting (IDW) method of interpolation.
期刊介绍:
Eurasian Soil Science publishes original research papers on global and regional studies discussing both theoretical and experimental problems of genesis, geography, physics, chemistry, biology, fertility, management, conservation, and remediation of soils. Special sections are devoted to current news in the life of the International and Russian soil science societies and to the history of soil sciences.
Since 2000, the journal Agricultural Chemistry, the English version of the journal of the Russian Academy of Sciences Agrokhimiya, has been merged into the journal Eurasian Soil Science and is no longer published as a separate title.