Pramila Aggarwal
Indian Agricultural Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Pramila Aggarwal.
International Agrophysics | 2014
Bappa Das; Debashis Chakraborty; Vinod Kumar Singh; Pramila Aggarwal; Ravender Singh; Brahm S. Dwivedi
Abstract The study aims to elucidate the impact of organic inputs on strength and structural stability of aggregates in a sandy loam soil. Tensile strength, friability and water stability of aggregates, and the carbon contents in bulk soil and in large macro (>2 mm), small macro (0.25-2 mm), micro (0.053-0.25 mm) and silt+clay size (<0.053) aggregates were evaluated in soils from a long-term experiment with rice-wheat rotation at Modipuram, India, with different sources and amounts of organic C inputs as partial substitution of N fertilizer. Addition of organic substrates significantly improved soil organic C contents, but the type and source of inputs had different impacts. Tensile strength of aggregates decreased and friability increased through organic inputs, with a maximum effect under green gram residue (rice)-farmyard manure (wheat) substitution. Higher macroaggregates in the crop residue- and farmyard manure-treated soils resulted in a higher aggregate mean weight diameter, which also had higher soil organic C contents. The bulk soil organic C had a strong relation with the mean weight diameter of aggregates, but the soil organic C content in all aggregate fractions was not necessarily effective for aggregate stability. The soil organic C content in large macroaggregates (2-8 mm) had a significant positive effect on aggregate stability, although a reverse effect was observed for aggregates <0.25 mm. Partial substitution of nitrogen by organic substrates improved aggregate properties and the soil organic C content in bulk soil and aggregate fractions, although the relative effect varied with the source and amount of the organic inputs.
Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis | 2014
Bhaskar Narjary; Pramila Aggarwal
A field study was conducted in alluvial sandy loam soil to assess the impact of amendments and hydrogel application on soil hydrophysical properties. Soil physical environment was characterized and quantified using soil physical quality index (S). The main treatments include farmyard manure (FYM) and tank soil applied at 5 t ha−1 and no amendment, and subtreatments included three rates of hydrogel: 5, 2.5, and 0 kg ha−1. Hydrogel was applied at 5–7 cm deep just below the seed in rows. Results revealed that FYM along with gel application at 5 kg ha−1 significantly increased mean weight diameter, field capacity moisture content, plant-available water content and relative field capacity, retention pores (Ret P), water-stable structural units, and structural coefficient and reduced transmission pores (TP), penetration resistance, and saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks). Significantly greater values of S in hydrogel-treated plots and close associations of S with other soil physical parameters were obtained.
Bioelectromagnetics | 2016
Nilimesh Mridha; Sudipta Chattaraj; Debashis Chakraborty; Anjali Anand; Pramila Aggarwal; Shantha Nagarajan
Soil moisture stress during pod filling is a major constraint in production of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.), a fundamentally dry land crop. We investigated effect of pre-sowing seed priming with static magnetic field (SMF) on alleviation of stress through improvement in radiation and water use efficiencies. Experiments were conducted under greenhouse and open field conditions with desi and kabuli genotypes. Seeds exposed to SMF (strength: 100 mT, exposure: 1 h) led to increase in root volume and surface area by 70% and 65%, respectively. This enabled the crop to utilize 60% higher moisture during the active growth period (78-118 days after sowing), when soil moisture became limiting. Both genotypes from treated seeds had better water utilization, biomass, and radiation use efficiencies (17%, 40%, and 26% over control). Seed pre-treatment with SMF could, therefore, be a viable option for chickpea to alleviate soil moisture stress in arid and semi-arid regions, helping in augmenting its production. It could be a viable option to improve growth and yield of chickpea under deficit soil moisture condition, as the selection and breeding program takes a decade before a tolerant variety is released. Bioelectromagnetics. 37:400-408, 2016.
Agricultural Water Management | 2008
Debashis Chakraborty; Shantha Nagarajan; Pramila Aggarwal; V.K. Gupta; R.K. Tomar; R.N. Garg; R. N. Sahoo; Ankita Sarkar; Usha Kiran Chopra; K. S. Sundara Sarma; Naveen Kalra
Indian Journal of Agricultural Sciences | 2008
Pramila Aggarwal
Geoderma | 2006
Pramila Aggarwal; Karun Kumar Choudhary; Anil Kumar Singh; Debashis Chakraborty
Geoderma | 2012
Bhaskar Narjary; Pramila Aggarwal; Anupama Singh; Debashis Chakraborty; Ravender Singh
Soil & Tillage Research | 2014
Bappa Das; Debashis Chakraborty; Vinod Kumar Singh; Pramila Aggarwal; Ravender Singh; B. S. Dwivedi; R.P. Mishra
Field Crops Research | 2014
T.K. Das; Ranjan Bhattacharyya; S. Sudhishri; Arun Sharma; Yashpal S. Saharawat; K.K. Bandyopadhyay; Seema Sepat; R.S. Bana; Pramila Aggarwal; R.K. Sharma; Arti Bhatia; Geeta Singh; S.P. Datta; A. Kar; Billu Singh; Parmendra Singh; H. Pathak; A.K. Vyas; M.L. Jat
Geoderma | 2011
Ali Ashraf Amirinejad; Kalpana Kamble; Pramila Aggarwal; Debashis Chakraborty; Sanatan Pradhan; Raj Bala Mittal