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India is the second most populous country in the world.

With the increasing


population, the cultivable land resource is shrinking day to day. To meet the food, fiber,
fuel, fodder and other needs of the growing population, the productivity of agricultural
land and soil health needs to be improved. Green Revolution in the post independence era
has shown path to developing countries for self-sufficiency in food but sustaining
agricultural production against the finite natural resource base demands has shifted from
the “resource degrading” chemical agriculture to a “resource protective” biological or
organic agriculture. Green revolution technologies such as greater use of synthetic
agrochemicals like fertilizers and pesticides, adoption of nutrient-responsive, high-
yielding varieties of crops, greater exploitation of irrigation potentials etc. has boosted the
production output in most cases. However, continuous use of these high energy inputs
indiscriminately now leads to decline in production and productivity of various crops as
well as deterioration of soil health and environments. The most unfortunate impact of
Green Revolution Technologies on Indian Agriculture is as follows:
1. Imbalance in production
2. Dependency on synthetic chemical fertilizers
3. Increase in secondary & micronutrient deficiencies
4. Increase in pesticide use
5. Unscientific water management and distribution
6. Reduction in productivity
7. Reduction in quality of the produce
8. Extinction of gene pool
9. Environmental pollution
10. Imbalance in social and economic status
All these problems of GRT lead to not only reduction in productivity but also
deterioration of soil health as well as natural ecosystem. Moreover, to day the rural
economy is now facing a challenge of over dependence on outside inputs and day-by-day
increase in price of these inputs. Further, Indian Agriculture will face the market
competition due to globalization of trade as per World Trade Organization (WTO). Thus,
apart from quantity, quality will be the important factor. Such varieties of concern and
problems of modern Indian Agriculture gave birth to various new concepts of farming
such as organic farming, natural farming, biodynamic agriculture, do-nothing agriculture,
eco-farming, etc. The essential concept of these practices remains the same, i.e., back to
nature, where the philosophy is to feed the soil rather than the crops to maintain soil
health and it is a means of giving back to the nature what has been taken from it
(Funtilana, 1990). Therefore, for sustaining the productivity of the crop, maintaining the
soil health and healthy ecosystem, there is need for adoption of an alternative farming
system, may be the organic farming.
In most of the developing countries use of chemical fertilizers to increase the crop
production is becoming highly essential. Biologically fixed nitrogen is such a source
which can supply an adequate amount of nitrogen to the plants and other nutrients to
some extent. It is a non hazardous way of increasing soil fertility. Biologically fixed
Nitrogen consumes about 25 to 30% less energy than normally used in chemical process.
Concentrations of elements in biofertilizers are within the tolerable range. As these plants
multiplying rapidly, biofertilizers are required in less quantity. They are also adding some
enzymes and growth promoting hormones in the soil. Dead and decaying organic matters
increase the humus content of the soil. Hence biofertilizers are more beneficial than
inorganic fertilizers.
The term ‘biofertilizers’ include selective microorganisms like fungi, bacteria and
algae which are capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen or convert insoluble phosphate in
the soil into forms available to plants. Biofertilizers are cost effective, eco-friendly and
renewable sources of plant nutrients to supplement chemical fertilizers. Biofertilizers also
play a vital role in maintaining long term soil fertility and sustainability. In the strictest
sense real biofertilizers are the green manures and organics, materials of biological
origin which are added to deliver the nutrients contained in them. Today, Rhizobium
and Blue green algae can be considered as established biofertilizers along with Azolla,
Azospirillum, Azatobacter, and Rhizobium. The established biofertilizers should be
referred to as inoculants after the name of microorganisms they contain (Verma and
Bhattacharya, 1994). Biofertilizers, more commonly known as microbial inoculants, are
artificially multiplied cultures of certain soil organisms that can improve soil fertility and
crop productivity. Although the beneficial effects of legumes in improving soil fertility
was known since ancient times and their role in biological nitrogen fixation was
discovered more than a century ago, commercial exploitation of such biological processes
is of recent interest and practice. The commercial history of biofertilizers began with the
launch of ‘Nitragin’ by Nobbe and Hiltner, a laboratory culture of Rhizobia in 1895,
followed by the discovery of Azotobacter and then the blue green algae and a host of
other micro-organisms. Azospirillum and Vesicular-Arbuscular Micorrhizae (VAM) are
fairly recent discoveries. In India the first study on legume Rhizobium symbiosis was
conducted by N.V.Joshi and the first commercial production started as early as 1956.
However the Ministry of Agriculture under the Ninth Plan initiated the real effort to
popularize and promote the input with the setting up of the National Project on
Development and Use of Biofertilizers (NPDB). Commonly explored biofertilizers in
India are mentioned below along with some salient features. Rhizobium (RHZ): These
inoculants are known for their ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen in symbiotic association
with plants forming nodules in roots (stem nodules in sesabaniamrostrata). RHZ are
however limited by their specificity and only certain legumes are benefited from this
symbiosis.
Azotobacter (AZT): This has been found beneficial to a wide array of crops covering
cereals, millets, vegetables, cotton and sugarcane. It is free living and non-symbiotic
nitrogen fixing organism that also produces certain substances good for the growth of
plants and antibodies that suppress many root pathogens.
Azospirillum (AZS): This is also a nitrogen-fixing micro organism beneficial for non-
leguminous plants. Like AZT, the benefits transcend nitrogen enrichment through
production of growth promoting substances.
Blue green Algae (BGA) and Azolla: BGA are photosynthetic nitrogen fixers and are free
living. They are found in abundance in India i. They too add growth-promoting
substances including vitamin B12, improve the soil’s aeration and water holding capacity
and add to bio mass when decomposed after life cycle. Azolla is an aquatic fern found in
small and shallow water bodies and in rice fields. It has symbiotic relation with BGA and
can help rice or other crops through dual cropping or green manuring of soil.
Phosphate solubilizing (PSB)/Mobilizing biofertilizer: Phosphorus, both native in soil
and applied in inorganic fertilizers becomes mostly unavailable to crops because of its
low levels of mobility and solubility and its tendency to become fixed in soil. The PSB
are life forms that can help in improving phosphate uptake of plants in different ways.
The PSB also has the potential to make utilization of India’s abundant deposits of rock
phosphates possible, much of which is not enriched.
Azolla: is an aquatic fern, which contains an endophytic cyanobacterium Anabaena
azollae in its leaves. It is used as a biofertilizer in rice field. Out of six species of Azolla,
A. pinnata is widely employed as a successful biofertilizer in Indian rice fields. It adds 30
Kg of nitrogen per hectare where the yield is equivalent to that of urea or ammonium
phosphate.
Mycorrhiza as biofertilizer: Mycorrhiza is a root inhabiting fungus found around or
inside the roots of many plants. It increases growth and yield and also provides protection
to the roots against edaphic (soil) stresses, pathogen and pests. It helps in the increased
uptake of soil and mineral water solution by the plant root system. It provides many uses
for the host plants eg. VAM (Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorrhiza) fungi. Mycorrhiza is of
two types.
a. Ectotrophic mycorrhiza, which are found only outside the surface of roots of plants. eg.
Basidiomycetous fungi.
b. Endotrophic mycorrhiza, which are found inside the roots, in the intercellular spaces
and even inside the cell (intra and intercellular) eg. VAM fungi.
Benefits from biofertilizers
1. Biofertilizers are easy to produce in abundance and are available at low cost to the
marginal farmers.
2. It increases soil fertility without causing any damage to the soil.
3. Application of biofertilizers increases yield upto 45 per cent and the left over
biofertilizers in the soil increases yield as long as the biofertilizer remains in the soil
up to 3 to 4 years.
4. Azolla, which is a biofertilizer amends the soil with organic matter. Cyanobacteria in
particular secrete growth promoting hormones like indole 3-acetic acid, indole butyric
acid, naphthalene acetic acid, aminoacids, protein and vitamins to soil.
5. Cyanobacteria grow well both in acidic as well as in alkaline soils. Since,
cyanobacteria are potent neutralizers, they help in the neutralization of soil. The
process of converting untenable, fallow land to cultivable soil is termed as soil
reclamation. Blue green algae play a vital role in this conversion.
6. Symbiotic nitrogen fixing Rhizobium is a biofertilizer. It adds 50 to 150 Kg of
nitrogen to soil per hectare. Azatobacter and Azospirillum secrete antibiotics which
act as biopesticides.
7. Ectotrophic mycorrhiza, which acts as a biofertilizer, increases the surface area of the
roots of host plants, so that more absorption of nutrients by the roots is made possible.

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