Influence of Conservation Tillage on Carbon Sequestration Mechanism Related to Aggregation

Authors

  • MN Amin Department of Environmental Science, Patuakhali Science and Technology University, Dumki, Patuakhali-8602
  • SC Shil Department of Environmental Science, Patuakhali Science and Technology University, Dumki, Patuakhali-8602
  • RC Ghosh Department of Environmental Science, Patuakhali Science and Technology University, Dumki, Patuakhali-8602
  • M Shamsuzzoha Department of Emergency Management, Patuakhali Science and Technology University, Dumki, Patuakhali-8602

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3329/jesnr.v9i1.30286

Keywords:

Carbon sequestration, Conservation tillage, Microaggregates, Soil aggregation

Abstract

This study focuses on the influence of conservation tillage on carbon sequestration mechanism related to aggregation. Conservation tillage reduces the process of rapid microaggregates formation and mineralization into the microaggregates essentially a positive influence of soil aggregation on the build up of organic matter. The Carbon mineralization is four or five times higher in crushed free micro aggregates than in crushed macroaggregates. As a result conservation agriculture ensures higher carbon sequestration in soil rather than the conventional agriculture. However, the carbon sequestration for different tillage has significant variations at 1-10 cm depth but the variations in non significant for higher depth. The carbon sink potential for conservation agriculture is much higher but it differs due to climate, soil type, nutrient use soil cover and the methodology used.

J. Environ. Sci. & Natural Resources, 9(1): 23-27 2016

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Abstract
1112
PDF
767

Author Biography

MN Amin, Department of Environmental Science, Patuakhali Science and Technology University, Dumki, Patuakhali-8602



Downloads

Published

2016-11-08

How to Cite

Amin, M., Shil, S., Ghosh, R., & Shamsuzzoha, M. (2016). Influence of Conservation Tillage on Carbon Sequestration Mechanism Related to Aggregation. Journal of Environmental Science and Natural Resources, 9(1), 23–27. https://doi.org/10.3329/jesnr.v9i1.30286

Issue

Section

Articles