SOILS IN INDIA
There are seven soil deposits in India. They are alluvial soil, black soil, red soil, laterite soil, arid soil, forest and mountainous soil, and marsh soil. These soils are formed by the sediments brought down by the rivers. They also have varied chemical properties.
The Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) has classified soils into eight categories:
- Alluvial Soil
- Black Cotton Soil
- Red Soil
- Laterite Soil
- Mountainous or Forest Soils
- Arid or Desert Soil
- Peaty and Marshy Soil/Bog Soil
PARAMETERS | DATA |
ALLUVIAL SOIL | |
Distribution | Indo-Gangetic Plains, Assam, Punjab, and coastal parts of Gujarat, Goa, Kerala, Puducherry, and Andhra Pradesh. |
Formation | Alluvial soils are formed mainly due to silt deposited by the Indo-Gangetic-Brahmaputra rivers. |
Share | They are the largest soil group, covering about 15 lakh sq km or about 46% of the total area. |
Physical Characteristics |
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Chemical Characteristics |
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Crops | They yield splendid crops of rice, wheat, sugarcane, tobacco, cotton, jute, maize, oilseeds, vegetables, and fruits. |
Rainfall |
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BLACK SOILS | |
Distribution | Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, parts of Karnataka, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, and Tamil Nadu. |
Formation | Formed due to weathering of basaltic rocks which emerged during the fissure eruption of the Cretaceous period. |
Share | Spread over 46 lakh sq km (16.6% of the total area). |
Physical Characteristics |
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Chemical Characteristics |
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Crops |
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RED SOILS | |
Distribution | Found in regions such as Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Odisha, some parts of Karnataka, and southeast Maharashtra. |
Formation | Formed as a result of weathering of metamorphic and igneous rocks. |
Share | Covers 18.5% of the area. |
Physical Characteristics |
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Chemical Characteristics | Deficient in phosphate, lime, magnesia, humus, and nitrogen. |
Crops |
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LATERITE SOILS | |
Distribution |
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Formation |
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Share | Widespread in India, covering over 10% of the total geographical area. |
Physical Characteristics |
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Chemical Characteristics |
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Crops |
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MOUNTAIN/FOREST SOIL | |
Distribution | Mainly found in the Himalayan region, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, and also in Peninsular India and the Eastern Ghats. |
Formation | Governed by the deposition of organic matter derived from forests, with characteristics that change according to parent rocks, ground configuration, and climate. |
Share | Occupies about 2.85 lakh sq km (8.67% of the total land area of India). |
Physical Characteristics |
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Chemical Characteristics |
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Crops |
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DESERT/ARID SOIL | |
Distribution | Occurs in arid and semi-arid regions of Rajasthan, Punjab, and Haryana. |
Formation | Desert soils form in areas where the demand for water by the atmosphere (evaporation) and plants (transpiration) is much greater than precipitation. |
Share | Covers an area of 1.42 lakh sq km (or 4.32% of the total area). |
Physical Characteristics |
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Chemical Characteristics |
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Crops | Only drought-resistant and salt-tolerant crops such as barley, cotton, millets, maize, and pulses are grown. |
PEATY SOILS | |
Distribution |
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Formation | Formed from partially decomposed plant material under anaerobic water-saturated conditions. |
Physical Characteristics |
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Chemical Characteristics |
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SALINE AND ALKALINE SOILS | |
Distribution | Found mainly in the states of Gujarat, Bihar, Haryana, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal. |
Formation |
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Share | Around 6.727 million hectares in India, approximately 2.1% of the geographical area of the country, is salt-affected. |
Physical Characteristics | In regions with high sub-soil water tables, injurious salts are transferred from below by capillary action, resulting from evaporation in the dry season. |
Chemical Characteristics |
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Crops | The soil is infertile. |
Issues with Indian Soil
- Soil Erosion: Caused by natural factors like wind erosion and human activities such as excessive farm runoff and overgrazing, leading to the loss of topsoil and making it infertile.
- Deforestation: Facilitates the loss of the topsoil due to surface runoff as tree roots, which bind the soil and keep it intact, are removed.
- Faulty Agriculture: Practices involving high fertilizer use and monocropping damage the soil, making it infertile.
- Soil Salinity: Multifactorial causes; any process affecting the soil-water balance can influence salt movement and accumulation.
- Mining Activities: Coal mining causes drastic changes in the soil profile and reduces soil organic carbon and nutrient pools.
- Sea Level Rise: Low-lying coastal areas are inundated with saltwater, contaminating the soil.
- Nutrient Imbalance: Essential for high crop yields, but excessive or imbalanced nutrient inputs can pose risks to the environment, human health, and ecosystems.
- Soil Contamination: Both natural (geogenic) and human-made (anthropogenic) factors contribute to soil and water pollution.
- Soil Sealing: Urban expansion takes over fertile soils, reducing the availability of productive land and extending urbanization beyond traditional city limits.
Socio-Economic Impact of Soil Infertility
- Food Security: Soil fertility is essential for sustaining agriculture; without it, crops fail, and land becomes barren.
- Poverty: Loss of soil fertility could push landowners and those dependent on cultivation into poverty.
- Deforestation: Increased soil infertility leads to forest clearing for new farmland, which destroys biodiversity in the area.
- Migration: People may migrate from rural farm areas to urban areas due to decreased agricultural productivity.
- Crop Failure: Soil infertility can lead to crop failure and drought-like conditions in agricultural areas.
Way Forward and Soil Conservation
- Crop Rotation: Conserves soil fertility by allowing different crops that require different nutrients to be rotated, giving the soil time to restore lost nutrients.
- Reduce Jhum: Reducing shifting cultivation by persuading tribal people to adopt settled agriculture is an effective method for soil conservation.
- Contour Bunding: Terracing and contour bunding divide hill slopes into smaller areas, slow down water flow, promote water absorption, and help prevent soil erosion.
- Afforestation: Maintaining 20-25% forest cover is considered healthy for soil and water conservation.
- Organic Practices: Reducing the use of inorganic fertilizers preserves soil fertility.
- Terrace Planting: Utilizes the natural topography to benefit from the way rainwater flows, helping to prevent erosion.
- Native Cropping: Planting native crops that enhance the soil helps to sustain conservation efforts.