Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services [Abstract only]

Decades of rampant land degradation have rendered many areas unsuitable for cultivation. In Madhya Pradesh, India, land degradation along with difficult terrain, and poor soil conditions make significant portions of land unfit for cultivation leading to the migration of tribal communities. These deg...

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Autores principales: Malaiappan, Sudharsan, Kumar, Gopal, Sikka, Alok
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: BOKU University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172897
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author Malaiappan, Sudharsan
Kumar, Gopal
Sikka, Alok
author_browse Kumar, Gopal
Malaiappan, Sudharsan
Sikka, Alok
author_facet Malaiappan, Sudharsan
Kumar, Gopal
Sikka, Alok
author_sort Malaiappan, Sudharsan
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Decades of rampant land degradation have rendered many areas unsuitable for cultivation. In Madhya Pradesh, India, land degradation along with difficult terrain, and poor soil conditions make significant portions of land unfit for cultivation leading to the migration of tribal communities. These degraded or sporadically cultivated lands are caught in a vicious cycle leading to further degradation. A cost-effective agroecological approach to transform degraded lands into productive assets using natural amendments is crucial for improving agricultural diversity, soil health, and overall ecosystem services. It also helps alleviate the pressure of intensive farming on other lands. Moreover, this practice holds promise for reversing migration among tribal communities. The CGIAR’s Agroecology Initiative, in collaboration with local tribal farmers and stakeholders, has co-designed an innovative practice locally popularized as Krishi Kund (micro-site improvement with agriculture pits). This practice focuses on improving micro-sites rather than entire parcels of land using organic amendments. In this method, small cylindrical pits (did: 60cm, depth 60cm) are excavated at 1.2m intervals, filled with locally available organic materials such as cow dung compost, vermicompost, plant biomass, and organic inoculants, and then covered with sieved soil. This approach improves approximately 20% (6450 pits per hectare) of the land area, resulting in a similar yield of fully restored land. Circular depressions around each pit serve as micro catchments, conserving rainwater on-site. This technique effectively enhances soil physical condition, fertility, water retention, thermal buffering leading to successful crop establishment and production. Drought tolerant crops viz pigeon pea, caster for the poor water availability sites and other cash crops including vegetables at sites of water availability are being grown. A two-year recovery period was estimated for the cost incurred on land restoration. Krishi Kund offers a resource-efficient alternative for restoring degraded lands by concentrating organic materials within specific areas and minimising soil loss. This method aligns with the goal of achieving Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) and can significantly contribute to fulfiling Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 15.3, which aims to end desertification and restore degraded land.
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spelling CGSpace1728972025-11-07T08:02:19Z Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services [Abstract only] Malaiappan, Sudharsan Kumar, Gopal Sikka, Alok agroecology land degradation land restoration soil quality ecosystem services cultivation water conservation communities farmers stakeholders composts vermicomposts biomass water availability sustainable development goals Decades of rampant land degradation have rendered many areas unsuitable for cultivation. In Madhya Pradesh, India, land degradation along with difficult terrain, and poor soil conditions make significant portions of land unfit for cultivation leading to the migration of tribal communities. These degraded or sporadically cultivated lands are caught in a vicious cycle leading to further degradation. A cost-effective agroecological approach to transform degraded lands into productive assets using natural amendments is crucial for improving agricultural diversity, soil health, and overall ecosystem services. It also helps alleviate the pressure of intensive farming on other lands. Moreover, this practice holds promise for reversing migration among tribal communities. The CGIAR’s Agroecology Initiative, in collaboration with local tribal farmers and stakeholders, has co-designed an innovative practice locally popularized as Krishi Kund (micro-site improvement with agriculture pits). This practice focuses on improving micro-sites rather than entire parcels of land using organic amendments. In this method, small cylindrical pits (did: 60cm, depth 60cm) are excavated at 1.2m intervals, filled with locally available organic materials such as cow dung compost, vermicompost, plant biomass, and organic inoculants, and then covered with sieved soil. This approach improves approximately 20% (6450 pits per hectare) of the land area, resulting in a similar yield of fully restored land. Circular depressions around each pit serve as micro catchments, conserving rainwater on-site. This technique effectively enhances soil physical condition, fertility, water retention, thermal buffering leading to successful crop establishment and production. Drought tolerant crops viz pigeon pea, caster for the poor water availability sites and other cash crops including vegetables at sites of water availability are being grown. A two-year recovery period was estimated for the cost incurred on land restoration. Krishi Kund offers a resource-efficient alternative for restoring degraded lands by concentrating organic materials within specific areas and minimising soil loss. This method aligns with the goal of achieving Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) and can significantly contribute to fulfiling Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 15.3, which aims to end desertification and restore degraded land. 2024-09-11 2025-02-10T08:25:59Z 2025-02-10T08:25:59Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172897 en Open Access application/pdf application/pdf BOKU University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Malaiappan, Sudharsan; Kumar, Gopal; Sikka, Alok. 2024. Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services. [Abstract only]. Paper presented at the Tropentag 2024, Vienna, Germany, 11-13 September 2024. 1p.
spellingShingle agroecology
land degradation
land restoration
soil quality
ecosystem services
cultivation
water conservation
communities
farmers
stakeholders
composts
vermicomposts
biomass
water availability
sustainable development goals
Malaiappan, Sudharsan
Kumar, Gopal
Sikka, Alok
Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services [Abstract only]
title Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services [Abstract only]
title_full Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services [Abstract only]
title_fullStr Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services [Abstract only]
title_full_unstemmed Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services [Abstract only]
title_short Krishi Kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands: microsite for improved production and ecosystem services [Abstract only]
title_sort krishi kund for agroecological transition of degraded lands microsite for improved production and ecosystem services abstract only
topic agroecology
land degradation
land restoration
soil quality
ecosystem services
cultivation
water conservation
communities
farmers
stakeholders
composts
vermicomposts
biomass
water availability
sustainable development goals
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172897
work_keys_str_mv AT malaiappansudharsan krishikundforagroecologicaltransitionofdegradedlandsmicrositeforimprovedproductionandecosystemservicesabstractonly
AT kumargopal krishikundforagroecologicaltransitionofdegradedlandsmicrositeforimprovedproductionandecosystemservicesabstractonly
AT sikkaalok krishikundforagroecologicaltransitionofdegradedlandsmicrositeforimprovedproductionandecosystemservicesabstractonly