Differential Impacts of Agricultural Management Practices on Soil Fertility in Dubeypur Block, Sultanpur

Authors

  • Surbhi Singh M.Sc.(Ag.) Soil Science, KNIPSS, Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India Author
  • Kumar Anshuman Assistant Professor (Soil Science), KNIPSS, Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India Author
  • Aman Yadav M.Sc.(Ag.) Soil Science, KNIPSS, Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India Author
  • Sandeep Yadav Assistant Professor (Soil Science), Institute of Agriculture Sciences & Technology, SRMU, Barabanki, Uttar Pradesh, India Author
  • Nandan Singh Soil Scientist, KVK (Bahraich-1), Bahraich, Uttar Pradesh, India Author
  • Ram Ratan Singh Director, Institute of Agriculture & Natural Sciences, DDU, Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, India Author
  • Pankaj Singh Assistant Professor (Soil Science), KNIPSS, Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India Author
  • Kedar Nath Rai Assistant Professor (Soil Science), KNIPSS, Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India Author
  • Sarita Devi Gupta Assistant Professor (Soil Science), KNIPSS, Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32628/IJSRST251344

Keywords:

Bulk density, pH, EC, organic carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium

Abstract

This study provides a comparative assessment of soil fertility under predominant agricultural systems in Dubeypur Block, Sultanpur, Eastern Uttar Pradesh—a region facing sustainability challenges due to intensive conventional practices. We analyzed key physico-chemical properties (bulk density, pH, electrical conductivity, organic carbon) and available macronutrients (N, P, K) across 300 surface soil samples (0–15 cm) from six cropping systems: Rice-Wheat (RWCS), Low-Value (LVCS), Vegetable-Based (VBCS), Horticulture-Based (HBCS), Legume-Based (LBCS), Pasture/Forest (P/FS), and Salt-Affected Soils (SAS). Results revealed significant management-driven divergence: Conservation systems (P/FS, LBCS) exhibited optimal soil structure (BD: 1.33–1.40 Mg m⁻³), near-neutral pH (7.83–8.04), higher organic carbon (5.6–6.29 g kg⁻¹), and elevated N (227.44 kg ha⁻¹) and P (19.86 kg ha⁻¹). Conversely, SAS and intensive systems (RWCS) showed degradation—higher BD (≤1.40 Mg m⁻³), alkalinity/salinity (pH ≤9.04; EC ≤1.55 dS m⁻¹), depleted OC (≤2.85 g kg⁻¹), and reduced N (≤170.16 kg ha⁻¹). Organic carbon emerged as the keystone driver of fertility. The findings underscore the urgent need for regenerative practices (organic amendments, reduced tillage, legume integration) to mitigate degradation and enhance agroecological resilience.

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Published

30-07-2025

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Research Articles

How to Cite

Differential Impacts of Agricultural Management Practices on Soil Fertility in Dubeypur Block, Sultanpur. (2025). International Journal of Scientific Research in Science and Technology, 12(4), 735-740. https://doi.org/10.32628/IJSRST251344