The present study deals with fertility changes in agro-ecosystems where vegetation is removed by slash and burn procedures, the land is planted to crops (cultivated) for one year, and then left to revegetate naturally for upto 50 years (forested fallow, here after referred to as 'fallow') before the entire cycle (locally called 'Jhum') is repeated. A comparison has been made between three jhum cycles of 30, 10 and 5 years. Depletion in soil carbon continued throughout the cropping period of one year and extended upto a 5 year fallow. This could be one of the reasons against a short jhum cycle, alongwith a similar pattern in depletion of nitrogen. Available phosphorus build up in the fallows also starded only beyond a 5 year fallow period wi...
Slash and burn is a land use practice widespread all over the world, and nowadays it is formally rec...
The present study is a comparison of the energy efficiency of three types of shifting agriculture, k...
grantor: University of TorontoLarge tracts of once productive farmlands in the Indo-Ganget...
The present study deals with fertility changes in agro-ecosystems where vegetation is removed by sla...
The effect of 'slash and burn' agriculture (jhum) on soil fertility at higher elevations of Meghalay...
The hydrology and the pattern of sediment and nutrient loss through water that may occur under 'slas...
Jhum agriculture is widely practiced on Arunachal Pradesh’s hill slopes, and it is more than just a ...
The nitrogen budge of 'rotational bush fallow' agriculture (jhum) was investigated at higher elevati...
Subsequent to slash-and-burn of the forested fallow, and during shifting agriculture (Jhum) in the n...
Shifting cultivation (jhum cultivation), a common practice of converting forest land into agricultur...
Not AvailableLand-use change, particularly soil organic carbon (SOC) loss induced by shifting cultiv...
Four grassland types at Cherrapunji, in northeastern India, namely the Osbeckia, Arundinella, Ischae...
An exponential increase in the human population has drastically reduced the length of the fallow per...
Shifting cultivation has resulted in large-scale deforestation and forest degradation in the tropics...
Not AvailableIn order to assess the impact of long term land -use systems on soil fertility, a study...
Slash and burn is a land use practice widespread all over the world, and nowadays it is formally rec...
The present study is a comparison of the energy efficiency of three types of shifting agriculture, k...
grantor: University of TorontoLarge tracts of once productive farmlands in the Indo-Ganget...
The present study deals with fertility changes in agro-ecosystems where vegetation is removed by sla...
The effect of 'slash and burn' agriculture (jhum) on soil fertility at higher elevations of Meghalay...
The hydrology and the pattern of sediment and nutrient loss through water that may occur under 'slas...
Jhum agriculture is widely practiced on Arunachal Pradesh’s hill slopes, and it is more than just a ...
The nitrogen budge of 'rotational bush fallow' agriculture (jhum) was investigated at higher elevati...
Subsequent to slash-and-burn of the forested fallow, and during shifting agriculture (Jhum) in the n...
Shifting cultivation (jhum cultivation), a common practice of converting forest land into agricultur...
Not AvailableLand-use change, particularly soil organic carbon (SOC) loss induced by shifting cultiv...
Four grassland types at Cherrapunji, in northeastern India, namely the Osbeckia, Arundinella, Ischae...
An exponential increase in the human population has drastically reduced the length of the fallow per...
Shifting cultivation has resulted in large-scale deforestation and forest degradation in the tropics...
Not AvailableIn order to assess the impact of long term land -use systems on soil fertility, a study...
Slash and burn is a land use practice widespread all over the world, and nowadays it is formally rec...
The present study is a comparison of the energy efficiency of three types of shifting agriculture, k...
grantor: University of TorontoLarge tracts of once productive farmlands in the Indo-Ganget...