Impact of sustainable land-use management practices on soil carbon
sequestration and soil quality in the west coast of India
Abstract
The evaluation of sustainable land management practices is imperative
under particular soil type, climate, and cropping sequence following
area-specific best management practices. The alternative land-use system
(ALUS-natural forest, pasture, cashew, areca nut, coconut) on hills and
agricultural land-use system (AGLUS-rice-rice, rice-pulse) in the
coastal plains of west coast India was evaluated in this study. The
present study assessed the impact of sustainable land-use management
practices on different fractions of SOC and soil quality under ALUS and
AGLUS. The total SOC stocks under different land-use systems varied from
14.4 Mg ha−1 in rice–rice rotations to 133.7 Mg ha−1 in cashew and more
than 75% of total SOC stock were found as a passive carbon pool. The
higher lability index, available nutrients, and biochemical properties
were found in ALUS. This variation in the levels of SOC and soil quality
was due to land use and management practices. The results indicated land
use with areca nut (0.8) on the hills and rice–pulses (0.25) rotations
on the coast had maintained soil quality of high order. On upscaling the
different land-use systems by growing cashew, areca nut, coconut,
pasture, and rice-pulses rotations, SOC stocks of Goa can increase from
6.33 Tg at present to 32 Tg. We recommend promoting sustainable
agriculture with ALUS on the hills and with AGLUS on the coastal plains
of Goa for enhancing SOC sequestration and improving soil quality.