Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/84970
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Type: Journal article
Title: Response of salt-tolerant rice varieties to biocompost application in sodic soil of Eastern Uttar Pradesh
Author: Khan, A.H.
Singh, A.K.
Mubeen,
Singh, S.
Zaidi, N.W.
Singh, U.S.
Haefele, S.M.
Citation: American Journal of Plant Sciences, 2014; 5(01):7-13
Publisher: Scientific Research Publishing
Issue Date: 2014
ISSN: 2158-2742
2158-2750
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Akhtar H. Khan, Ashok K. Singh, Mubeen, Sudhanshu Singh, Najam W. Zaidi, Uma S. Singh, Stephan M. Haefele
Abstract: Sodic soils have immense productivity potential, if managed through proper technology interventions. Biocom-post is prepared by composting pressmud (a sugar industry byproduct) received from cane juice filtration and spent wash received from distilleries through microbial aerobic decomposition and can be used to reclaim sodic soils. Field experiments were conducted during the wet season of 2011 and 2012 to study the effect of incorpora-tion of biocompost in sodic soil with four treatments: T1—Control, T2—Biocompost at 2 t ha⁻¹, T3—Biocompost at 4 t ha⁻¹ and T4—Biocompost at 6 t ha⁻¹. The two promising salt tolerant rice varieties preferred by farmers, Narendra usar 3 and NDR 359 were used as test crops, which can produce yields ranging between 2 - 4 t ha⁻¹ in soil having a pH range of 9.2 to 10.5. Among the different doses of biocompost tested, application of biocompost at 6 t ha⁻¹ registered highest yields, enabled by a higher biomass, ear bearing tiller (EBT), and grain fertility in both varieties. Narendra usar 3 was more responsive to treatments even at lower doses of biocompost than NDR 359, but NDR 359 yielded slightly higher than Narendra usar 3 in all treatments. Soil health was also improved evidently on better fertility and low soil pH and EC at harvest. Thus, biocompost can be considered as a com-mercially viable, environmentally acceptable and practically enforceable option for improving the crop produc-tivity and soil fertility status.
Keywords: Biocompost; Narendra usar 3; NDR 359; Salt-Tolerant Varieties; Sodic Soil
Rights: Copyright © 2014 Akhtar H. Khan et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. In accor-dance of the Creative Commons Attribution License all Copyrights © 2014 are reserved for SCIRP and the owner of the intellectual property Akhtar H. Khan et al. All Copyright © 2014 are guarded by law and by SCIRP as a guardian.
DOI: 10.4236/ajps.2014.51002
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ajps.2014.51002
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 7
Australian Centre for Plant Functional Genomics publications

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