1. CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE PRINCIPLES
in
SRI
Prof. P. K. Roul,
Associate Director of Research
Orissa University of Agriculture and Technology,
Bhubaneswar
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
2. Objectives
A. Introduce the concept of Conservation Agriculture-
as one NRM Dimension
B. Share the experience of CAPs with Tribal Farmers of
Kendujhar in Odisha
C. Correlate the SRI practices with CA principles
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
3. What is conservation agriculture?
A production system that:
a) Has minimum soil disturbance
b) Practices suitable crop rotations
c) Keeps the soil covered with plant residues/
residue recycling
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
4. Correlating the SRI practices
with
Natural Resource Management
&
Conservation Agriculture Principles
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
5. Natural Resources
Land
Water
Biodiversity (Flora &
Fauna)
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
7. Proper tillage
Less Tillage X
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
8. Residue
management
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
9. Crop rotation
Early Harvest
Better soil structure under saturation
Intense microbial (Rhizobium) activity
Further scope of crop residue addition
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
10. LESS METHANE EMISSION:
Improved drainage A large fraction of methane is
produced in rice soils.
More micro/macro-
organisms
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
11. Water conservation Water becoming a scarce and costly input.
Rice alone consumes 70% of the water used in
agriculture.
Conventional rice requires 5000 liters of water
for producing 1 kg of rice (Bhuiyan et al., 1995,
IRRI).
The share of water for agriculture drastically
go down, as demand for domestic and
industrial sector is ever increasing.
Experimental results revealed that on an average 53%
less irrigation water and 28% higher yield was realized
in SRI farms than CRC farms. (Roul and Mishra., 2008,
Bhubaneswar).
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
12. Population projection and per
capita water availability
2500 2209 2500
1820
Per caita water availability
2000 1700 2000
Projected Population
1500 1340 1500
(Million)
1140
(m3)
1000
1000 1000
500 500
0 0
1991 2001 Stress 2025 2050 Scarcity
Condition condition
Year
Per capita availability Population (million)
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
13. Organic
Nutrition
SRI Focuses on Organics
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
14. Organic
Nutrition
SRI Focuses on Organics
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
15. Biodiversity
Microbial Diversity
Crop Diversity
Genetic Diversity
Microorganism Conventional SRI
Total bacteria 88 x 106 105 x 106
Azospirillum 8 x 105 31 x 105
Azotobacter 39 x 103 66 x 103
Phosphobacteri 33 x 103 59 x 103
a
Compiled by: T.M. Thiyagarajan
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR
16. CONCLUSIONS
We should not judge a technology only from where it is today
I feel we are at the beginning of a long and exciting journey
The quality of future hinges on the decisions of today
SRI is definitely a sustainable practice, having ability to increase
productivity by input optimisation and agro-ecosystem conservation
ORISSA UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE AND TECHNOLOGY, BHUBANESWAR