<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><article>
  <title>Micronutrient Dynamics in Major Soil Orders of Renapur Tahsil and their correlation with Physiochemical Properties</title>

      <doi>https://doi.org/10.21276/AATCCReview.2025.13.03.358</doi>
  
  <authors>
      </authors>

      <abstract><![CDATA[<p>A study assessed micronutrient levels and their relationship with soil properties in Renapur<br />
Tahsil, Latur District. From 20 villages, 100 soil samples were classified into Inceptisols,<br />
Entisols, and Vertisols. In Inceptisols, Fe, Zn, Mn, and B ranged from low to high levels,<br />
while Cu was uniformly high. Entisols showed low to medium Fe and Zn, high Mn and Cu,<br />
and varied B levels. Vertisols had moderate Fe, low Zn and Mn, high Cu, and mostly low B.<br />
Overall, Zn was largely deficient (59%), followed by Fe (33%), Mn (42%), and B (34%) at<br />
low to moderate levels; Cu was high in all samples. Nutrient indices rated Zn as low, Fe, Mn,<br />
and B as moderate, and Cu as high. Micronutrients negatively correlated with pH and<br />
CaCO₃, but positively with organic carbon. The findings highlight the need for soil order-<br />
specific micronutrient strategies to improve fertility and productivity.</p>
]]></abstract>
  
  <body><![CDATA[<div class="aatcc-article-container"><div class="aatcc-category-label">Original Research Article</div><div class="aatcc-meta-box"><div class="aatcc-doi-wrap">
            <a class="aatcc-doi-btn" href="https://doi.org/10.21276/AATCCReview.2025.13.03.358" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.21276/AATCCReview.2025.13.03.358</a>
        </div><div class="aatcc-abstract-section">
                <h3>Abstract</h3>
                <div class="aatcc-abstract-text"><p>A study assessed micronutrient levels and their relationship with soil properties in Renapur<br />
Tahsil, Latur District. From 20 villages, 100 soil samples were classified into Inceptisols,<br />
Entisols, and Vertisols. In Inceptisols, Fe, Zn, Mn, and B ranged from low to high levels,<br />
while Cu was uniformly high. Entisols showed low to medium Fe and Zn, high Mn and Cu,<br />
and varied B levels. Vertisols had moderate Fe, low Zn and Mn, high Cu, and mostly low B.<br />
Overall, Zn was largely deficient (59%), followed by Fe (33%), Mn (42%), and B (34%) at<br />
low to moderate levels; Cu was high in all samples. Nutrient indices rated Zn as low, Fe, Mn,<br />
and B as moderate, and Cu as high. Micronutrients negatively correlated with pH and<br />
CaCO₃, but positively with organic carbon. The findings highlight the need for soil order-<br />
specific micronutrient strategies to improve fertility and productivity.</p>
</div>
            </div><div class="aatcc-pdf-wrap">
            <a class="aatcc-pdf-btn" href="https://aatcc.peerjournals.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Micronutrient-Dynamics-in-Major-Soil-Orders-of-Renapur-Tahsil-and-their-correlation-with-Physiochemical-Properties.pdf" target="_blank">View / Download PDF</a>
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