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Govind Ballabh Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Pantnagar

After independence, development of the rural sector was considered the primary concern of the Government of India. In 1949, with the appointment of the Radhakrishnan University Education Commission, imparting of agricultural education through the setting up of rural universities became the focal point. Later, in 1954 an Indo-American team led by Dr. K.R. Damle, the Vice-President of ICAR, was constituted that arrived at the idea of establishing a Rural University on the land-grant pattern of USA. As a consequence a contract between the Government of India, the Technical Cooperation Mission and some land-grant universities of USA, was signed to promote agricultural education in the country. The US universities included the universities of Tennessee, the Ohio State University, the Kansas State University, The University of Illinois, the Pennsylvania State University and the University of Missouri. The task of assisting Uttar Pradesh in establishing an agricultural university was assigned to the University of Illinois which signed a contract in 1959 to establish an agricultural University in the State. Dean, H.W. Hannah, of the University of Illinois prepared a blueprint for a Rural University to be set up at the Tarai State Farm in the district Nainital, UP. In the initial stage the University of Illinois also offered the services of its scientists and teachers. Thus, in 1960, the first agricultural university of India, UP Agricultural University, came into being by an Act of legislation, UP Act XI-V of 1958. The Act was later amended under UP Universities Re-enactment and Amendment Act 1972 and the University was rechristened as Govind Ballabh Pant University of Agriculture and Technology keeping in view the contributions of Pt. Govind Ballabh Pant, the then Chief Minister of UP. The University was dedicated to the Nation by the first Prime Minister of India Pt Jawaharlal Nehru on 17 November 1960. The G.B. Pant University is a symbol of successful partnership between India and the United States. The establishment of this university brought about a revolution in agricultural education, research and extension. It paved the way for setting up of 31 other agricultural universities in the country.

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  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    Nutrient management in wheat under various tillage systems after transplanted rice
    (G.B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Pantnagar - 263145 (Uttarakhand), 2013-06) Mishra, Aakash; Singh, Sobaran
    Agricultural sustainability implies an increasing trend in per capita productivity to meet the present needs without jeopardizing the future potential. This demands an appropriate method of land and nutrient stewardship for the development of sustainable agricultural systems. Soil tillage and nutrient management influences agricultural sustainability through its effects on soil processes, soil properties, and crop growth & development. In this prospect the present investigation was carried out during rabi seasons of 2009-10 and 2010-11 at Norman E. Borlaug Crop Research Centre, G.B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Pantnagar, entitled “Nutrient Management in Wheat under various Tillage system after transplanted Rice”. The experiment was laid out in split-plot design with three main-plot treatments i.e. three tillage methods (viz zero tillage, conventional tillage and subsoiling) and five sub-plots i.e. nutrient management options (viz, FP, GRD, STCR target @ 40 q ha-1, STCR target + FYM @ 10 tone ha-1, SSNM) with three replications. The observations were recorded on growth and physiological parameters (Plant height, flag leaf area and relative leaf water content), yield (grain, straw and biological) and yield attributing observations (spike length, no. of spike, grains per spike and thousand grain weight) and nutrient study of soil and plants (available N, P and K, its uptake and total uptake) under different tillage and nutrient management options. The tillage methods and nutrient management options had significant influence on yield & yield attributing characters and nutrient study of soil and plants. The average grain, straw, biological yield and plant nutrient uptake in wheat showed highest records under conventional tillage method and STCR target + FYM nutrient management option. Economics of an experiment showed that the cost of cultivation was higher under subsoiling and GRD treatment, whereas, gross and net monetary returns were higher under conventional tillage and STCR target + FYM and SSNM treatment respectively. The Benefit: Cost ratio was also higher under conventional tillage and STCR target + FYM nutrient management treatment.