Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2413746 Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The coastal low land suffers from water logging, salinity and acidity.•Bunding and drainage facilitated leaching of salts and restored agriculture in foot slopes.•Broad bed and furrow helped to harvest rainwater and improved the drainage.•It also resulted in higher cropping intensity, water and fish productivity.•Depth of submergence and salinity correlated with the rainfall and soil moisture.

The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami severely damaged the coastal ecosystems of the Indian islands of Andaman and Nicobar. Restoring coastal ecosystems and degraded soils of these islands is essential to provisioning of numerous ecosystem services for the native islanders and ecological functions and services of these hotspots of biodiversity. Thus, the present study was conducted to assess the impact of bunding and broad bed and furrow (BBF) systems in restoring the productivity of tsunami inundated coastal areas of southern Andaman. Bunding of agricultural land leached out the salts by impounding of rainwater with significant reduction in electrical conductivity (ECe), sodium absorption ratio (SAR), and exchangeable ions (e.g., Na+, Ca2+ + Mg2+, Cl− and SO42−). The BBF system installed in the low lying waterlogged areas improved the drainage of the beds, harvested rain water (4476 m3 ha−1), prevented entry of tidal and runoff water into the furrow, and reduced the overall salinity. In addition, microbial biomass carbon was significantly improved (193–210 mg kg−1soil). Whereas the low lying areas were inundated during the 20 to 45th standard meteorological week by 25 to 85 cm of water, soils under BBF systems were adequately drained and had moisture content between field capacity and the saturation level. The depth of submergence (R2 = 0.798) and soil salinity (R2 = −0.787) were correlated with the rainfall amount. Consequently, the BBF systems enabled a higher cropping intensity (218%), increased fish production (2.32 Mg ha−1) and water productivity (47.36 Rs m−3) and enhanced employment generation (213 man days). These land forming interventions must be up scaled to tsunami-affected, low lying areas of Andaman and elsewhere in southeastern Asia.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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