Nutrient Mining: Addressing the Challenges to Soil Resources and Food Security

2016 
Increasing population demands higher production and productivity of crops. Consequently, maintenance of soil fertility is a must for sustainable agriculture and future food security. Agriculturally productive soils have a pool of indigenous nutrients at any given point of time that are stored within the soil and may be available for supporting plant growth. This pool of nutrients, along with nutrient inputs from other sources such as irrigation water, crop residues, etc., constitutes the inherent soil nutrient-supplying capacity. There are several sinks of the native nutrients in the soil, most notably plant removal. Sustenance of inherent fertility of soils depends largely on replenishment of plant nutrients to the soil that are removed through intensive cultivation. Nutrient mining or negative balance between nutrient input and output results when the crop nutrient removal and nutrient losses to other sinks become higher than the soil-inherent nutrient supply. Current nutrient management strategies adopted by most farmers promote nutrient mining, as nutrient applications are inadequate and imbalanced. The application of 4R Nutrient Stewardship Principles, i.e., application of right source of fertilizer at right rate and time through a right method, has the potential to reduce nutrient mining from soils. These core principles help manage nutrients in a manner that crop productivity is sustained or improved without soil fertility depletion, and farm production economics is improved while environmental impact of agricultural nutrients is minimized.
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