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- Title
Is Rainwater Harvesting an Option for Designing Sustainable Cropping Patterns for Rainfed Agriculture?
- Authors
Akhtar, Masood; ‐Hassan, Fayyaz‐ul; Ahmed, Mukhtar; Hayat, Rifat; Stöckle, Claudio O.
- Abstract
Rainwater harvesting in small dams has good potential to provide supplementary agricultural irrigation during critical crop growth stages. Field experiments were conducted to evaluate cropping patterns: fallow-wheat (FW), mash-wheat (MaW), sorghum-wheat (SW), maize (grain)-wheat (MW), maize (grain)-gram (MG) and mung-canola (MuC); under two conditions: irrigated (Command area of Pira Fatehial small dam) and rainfed (Un-command area) on sandy loam soil during three years (2009 to 2011). Treatments were arranged in a randomized complete block design, three factor factorial (cropping patterns, irrigated/non-irrigated conditions and years) using four replications. The highest grain yield of wheat (5.6 Mg ha−1) was obtained from the MaW cropping pattern as compared to those from MW, FW and SW cropping patterns. Summer crops (sorghum fodder, maize grain and mash) performed excellent under irrigated conditions. Water use efficiency of wheat (14.3 kg ha−1mm−1) following mash under both the conditions exhibited higher values than when compared with those from SW, FW and MW cropping patterns. However, nutrient use efficiency in SW cropping pattern surpassed the others. Performance of all crops remained better under the irrigated condition during both all seasons and years, as rainfall deficiency was compensated by supplementary irrigations. Hence, this study concluded that farmers having water resources for supplemental irrigation should adopt the MW cropping pattern, based on grain yield, efficient utilization of available supplemental water and better utilization of nutrients. Similarly, based on improved nutrient utilization and monitory outputs, the MaW sequence should be followed in rain-fed areas for better resource management. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Subjects
WATER harvesting; SUSTAINABLE agriculture; CROPPING systems; DRY farming; IRRIGATION farming
- Publication
Land Degradation & Development, 2016, Vol 27, Issue 3, p630
- ISSN
1085-3278
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/ldr.2464