Management of Biological Nitrogen Fixation for the Development of More Productive and Sustainable Agricultural Systems
Extended versions of papers presented at the Symposium on Biological Nitrogen Fixation for Sustainable Agriculture at the 15th Congress of Soil Science, Acapulco, Mexico, 1994
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The subsistence agriculture of the pre-chemical era efficiently sustained the nitrogen status of soils by maintaining a balance between N loss and N gain from biological nitrogen fixation (BNF): the microbial conversion of atmospheric N to a form usable by plants. This was possible with less intensive cropping, adaptation of rational crop rotations and intercropping schemes, and the use of legumes as green manure. Modern agriculture concentrates on maximum output, however, overlooking input efficiency; it is not sustainable. Intensive monocropping, with no or inadequate crop rotations or green manuring, together with the excessive use of chemical N fertilizers, results in an imbalance between N gain and N loss. The losses are often larger than the gains, and soil N status declines. The challenge is to sustain soil N fertility in many different tropical and temperate farming systems operating at high productivity levels. This requires judicious integration of BNF components, maintaining a good balance between N losses and gains.In this book, papers on BNF in crop forage and tree legumes are augmented with discussions of integrated farming systems involving BNF, soil and N management, and recycling of legume residues. BNF by non-legumes are discussed, and attempts to transform cereals into nodulating plants are critically reviewed. Advances in the development of novel methodologies to understand symbiotic relations and to assess N2 fixation in the field are described, and means are presented to enhance BNF through plant and soil management or breeding and selection. Problems encountered in exploiting BNF under field conditions are examined, as are promising approaches to improving BNF exploitation.
1. Biological nitrogen fixation: An efficient source of nitrogen for sustainable agricultural production?.- 2. Sustainable agriculture in the semi-arid tropics through biological nitrogen fixation in grain legumes.- 3. Enhancing crop legume N2 fixation through selection and breeding.- 4. Enhancing legume N2 fixation through plant and soil management.- 5. Role of legumes in providing N for sustainable tropical pasture systems.- 6. Management of biological N2 fixation in alley cropping systems: Estimation and contribution to N balance.- 7. Manipulation of rhizobia microflora for improving legume productivity and soil fertility: A critical assessment.- 8. Green manure technology: Potential, usage, and limitations. A case study for lowland rice.- 9. Biological nitrogen fixation associated with sugar cane and rice: Contributions and prospects for improvement.- 10. Biological N2 fixation by heterotrophic and phototrophic bacteria in association with straw.- 11. Potential and pitfalls of trying to extend symbiotic interactions of nitrogen-fixing organisms to presently non-nodulated plants, such as rice.- 12. New techniques for studying competition by Rhizobia and for assessing nitrogen fixation in the field.- 13. Future benefits from biological nitrogen fixation: An ecological approach to agriculture.- 14. Research evaluation and impact analysis of biological nitrogen fixation.- Author index.
'The book is highly recommended for advanced students of agriculture as well as for agroculturalists, agrochemists, plant breeders and also also who are interested in various aspects of conservation and improving the natural resources with special reference to problems that are close to sustainable agriculture.' Acta Physiologiae Plantarum, 18:3 (1996)