22H . M . R AW S O N et al. was only 1.5 million t and decreasing. The situation was creating serious concerns for food security and diminishing foreign currency reserves.There are two standard approaches to increasing production: first to look for unused or under-utilized land that might be adapted to wheat cultivation and second to explore ways to increase yield per unit area in current wheat cropping areas. In the second approach yield is increased by reducing perceived environmental and genetic limitations.The paper presents the research activities designed to address the two approaches and meet the original request for assistance. At the outset basic requirements had to be fulfilled. Local crops researchers, agricultural extension workers and farmers had to commit to the project and be actively involved throughout. This would ensure that the project would build on best regional and local agricultural knowledge and avoid naïve suggestions that might have been tested previously and failed, or might otherwise be inappropriate. Researchers from the Wheat Research Centre (WRC) of the Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute (BARI) in association with the Department of Agricultural Extension (DAE), together with individuals of CIMMYT Bangladesh provided this network of expertise. Agricultural experts from other countries acted as consultants.Of interest to the study was land in southern Bangladesh that normally remains fallow during the dry season, so is potentially available to wheat. Constraints of high temperatures, salinity and available season length of less than 100 days had been commonly thought to preclude economic returns for wheat in that region. Further, water for irrigation is very limited thus making alternative crops like dry-season rice impractical. Could wheat be grown by working around the constraints in some way? Fallow land is estimated at more than 400 000 ha in southern Bangladesh. This land grows rice during the several months of the wet season during which time it remains largely submerged by monsoon waters.The primary requirement was to identify the main constraints to high yield in both the southern and traditional wheat lands, and then to ask farmers to test a range of methods on their farms to minimize those constraints. CIMMYT Bangladesh and WRC researchers had already concluded from many field trials in the traditional wheat growing areas of Bangladesh that the success of a rice-wheat rotation depended on meeting the optimum planting and harvesting dates for both the rice and the wheat (rice was usually transplanted aman, T. aman, grown during the wet season). The optimum planting date for wheat in the region had been estimated as the end of November (Ortiz-Monasterio et al., 1994). Despite this knowledge, wheat was commonly planted too late, so constraining vegetative growth and pushing the grain-filling phase into the very high temperatures of late March; because of the consequent short season and rapid maturity of the crop, yields were low and uneconomic. Sometimes wheat could ...
The rice-maize (R-M) system is rapidly expanding in Bangladesh due to its greater suitability for diverse soil types and environments. The present conventional method of cultivating puddled transplanted rice and maize is input-intensive, decreases soil health through intense ploughing, and ultimately reduces farm profitability. There is a need to investigate alternatives. Accordingly, we conducted a replicated 2-year (2020–2021) field study to investigate the effects of conservation agriculture (CA) based tillage and crop establishment (TCE) techniques and residue management practices on the physical, chemical, and biological properties of soil along with crop productivity and the profitability of rice-maize systems in the sandy loam soil of Northwest Bangladesh. Two TCE techniques Puddled transplanted rice (PTR) followed by Conventional tillage maize (CTM) and strip tillage direct-seeded rice (STDSR) followed by strip-tilled maize (STM) were assigned to the main plots and different percentages of crop residue retention (0, 25, and 50% by height) were allocated to the subplots. Results showed that a reduction in bulk density (BD), soil penetration resistance (SPR), and increased soil porosity were associated with STDSR/STM-based scenarios (strip tillage coupled with 25 and 50% residue retention). The soil organic carbon (SOC) fractions, such as dissolved organic C (DOC), light and heavy particulate organic matter C (POM-C), MAOM, and microbial biomass C (MBC) levels in the 0–10 cm layer under ST based treatments were 95, 8, 6, 2 and 45% greater, respectively, compared to CT with no residue treatment. When compared to the CT treatment, the DOC, light POM-C, heavy POM-C, and MAOM in the 10–20 cm layer with ST treatment were 8, 34, 25, 4 and 37% higher, respectively. Residue retention in ST increased average rice, maize, and system yields by 9.2, 14.0, and 14.12%, respectively, when compared to CT. The system gross margin and benefit-cost ratio (BCR) were $1,515 ha−1 and 1.90 under conventional tillage to $1,696 ha−1 and 2.15 under strip-tillage practices. Thus, our study suggests that CA could be an appropriate practice for sustaining soil fertility and crop yield under R-M systems in light-textured soils or other similar soils in Bangladesh.
Conservation agriculture (CA) based practices are gaining popularity in smallholder farming systems recently because they ensure soil quality and soil health, and they also reduce the total cultivation costs. However, weeds are a major hinderance to achieving the desired yield of crops in cereal-based cropping systems under CA-based practices. Proper weed management is a big challenge for crop growers to reduce the labor demand and cost of production. Considering these burning issues, a field study was done with a CA-based rice–wheat–mung bean (Vigna radiata L.) cropping pattern in two consecutive years (2017–2018 and 2018–2019). The study aimed to understand the types and distribution of weeds in non-puddled rice fields and also in strip-planted wheat fields in sandy loam textured soil with low organic matter (0.87%) content. Furthermore, we also tried to discover the most economic and effective ways to manage weeds in both cereals of the cropping pattern. The performance of two herbicides—pendimethalin (as pre-emergence) and carfentrazone–ethyl + isoproturon (as post-emergence)—for strip-planted wheat and three herbicides—two pre-emergence herbicides pretilachlor and pyrazosulfuron–ethyl as well as one post-emergence herbicide, bispyribac–sodium—for non-puddled rainy season rice were evaluated, where the ‘weedy check’ and ‘weed free’ treatments were considered as a control. In a two-year field experiment, eight weed species in the strip-planted wheat field during the first year and fourteen species in the second year were identified. Among them, three grasses such as Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers., Digitaria sanguinalis (L.) Scop. and Echinochloa colona (L.) Link and one broadleaf weed Physalis heterophylla (L.) Nees, were found to the dominant in both years. During the first season, the dominant weed species in strip-planted wheat was Physalis heterophylla (L.); Digitaria sanguinalis (L.) Scop was dominant in the second year. In a non-puddled field of rainy season rice, eleven weed species were found in the first year and twelve species were found in the second year. Among the weed species, four types of grasses (Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers., Leptochloa chinensis (L.) Nees, Echinochloa colona (L.) Link and Leersia hexandra (Sw.), one sedge (Fimbristylis miliacea (L.) Vahl) and four broadleaf weed species (Ludwigia decurrens (Walter), Jussiaea repens (L.), Enhydra fluctuans (Lour) and Alternanthera sessilis (L.) R.Br. ex DC.) were found the common in both years. The most dominant weed in non-puddled rainy season rice was Leptochloa chinensis (L.) for the first year and Alternanthera sessilis (L.) for the second year. The study revealed that the sequential application of pendimethalin as pre-emergence treatment followed by carfentrazone–ethyl + isoproturon as post-emergence treatment were most effective and economically viable for weed control in strip-till wheat because they achieved the highest grain and straw yields. For weed management in non-puddled rainy season rice, the herbicide pyrazosulfuron–ethyl applied as pre-emergence treatment and bispyribac–sodium as the post-emergence application were found to be the most effective combination to obtain a desirable yield.
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