Adoption of modern varieties and rice varietal diversity on household farms in Bangladesh

Adoption of modern varieties and rice varietal diversity on household farms in Bangladesh
Author: Tiongco, Marites
Publisher: Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Total Pages: 29
Release: 2016-02-02
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

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This paper investigates the relationship between adoption of modern rice varieties and rice varietal diversity on household farms in Bangladesh. As shown in previous studies, adoption of modern varieties depends on agroecological- and input-related factors, including the availability and use of irrigation facilities, such as tubewells. Having irrigation affects the diversity index significantly and positively, which could be due to the diffusion of more modern varieties (MVs) in areas where irrigation is available and accessible.

Determinants of Rice Variety Diversity on Household Farms in Bangladesh

Determinants of Rice Variety Diversity on Household Farms in Bangladesh
Author: Marites Tiongco
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

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This paper investigates factors affecting the adoption and diffusion of improved varieties and identifies the determinants of varietal diversification on household farms based on data collected in 2005 in six regions in Bangladesh by the International Rice Research Institute in collaboration with Department of Agricultural Extension in Bangladesh. It was found that varietal diversity was highest in the wet season than in the dry season, when close to 90% of the sample farmers grow more than one variety. The diversity is also high in the regions of Barisal and Chittagong where the proportion of poor population is 44% or greater. Diversity is enhanced in less favored areas in terms of agroecological conditions such as flood prone or drought prone or saline areas. This implies that policy makers should provide appropriate and area-specific interventions and programs so they can cope up with yield losses in these less favored areas. On the other hand, factors associated with lower rice varietal diversity were those farms that have irrigation, and were located in very low land areas. Among the factors found to significantly influence the adoption of modern varieties such as BR 29 are use of irrigation, and varietal traits of high yield, good grain quality, and pest resistance. The importance of these traits should be taken into consideration in the development and introduction of nutritional traits as farmers will adopt new varieties if there is no yield penalty and if good eating quality is maintained.

Guide to Participatory Varietal Selection for Submergence-tolerant Rice

Guide to Participatory Varietal Selection for Submergence-tolerant Rice
Author: T. R. Paris
Publisher: IRRI
Total Pages: 120
Release: 2011
Genre: Agricultural development projects
ISBN: 9712202623

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The Green Revolution averted the threat of famine through the rapid adoption of improved rice varieties. However, despite this huge success, hundreds of millions of poor rice-farming families in rainfed areas still live in poverty and suffer from food (rice) insecurity. Despite many released improved rice varieties for rainfed conditions, farmers still use local varieties that can withstand drought and floods but have low yields or they use the same varieties for many years because of a lack of better varieties. Rainfed rice farmers are slow to adopt improved varieties because of several problems. One problem is more of extension than breeding - many farmers, particularly those living in remote rainfed areas, may not have access to or information about the seed of new varieties. Another problem is that variety testing programs are often conducted on-station, which does not represent farmers' fields. Moreover, conventional rice breeding programs usually seek farmers' input only at the very end of the process, when newly released varieties, usually one or two per year, are evaluated in on-farm demonstration trials. Often, in remote and unfavorable areas, subsistence farmers, who comprise the majority of the rural farming population in Asia, give importance to social and cultural dimensions aside from the agronomic performance of the new rice varieties. The complexities of developing acceptable varieties for variable and stressful rainfed environments require that breeders become deeply familiar with men and women farmers' needs and preferences. Since 1977, IRRI has been making efforts to improve communication among farmers, breeders, and extension workers so that men and women farmers' concerns and preferences are considered in plant breeding objectives. Participatory varietal selection (PVS) is a simple way for breeders and agronomists to learn which varieties perform well on-station and on-farm and to obtain feedback from the potential end users in the early phases of the breeding cycle. It is a means for social scientists to identify the varieties that most men and women farmers prefer, including the reasons for their preference and constraints to adoption. Based on IRRI's experience in collaboration with national agricultural research and extension system partners and farmers, PVS, which includes "researcher-managed" and "farmer-managed" trials, is an effective strategy for accelerating the dissemination of stress-tolerant varieties. PVS has also been instrumental in the fast release of stress-tolerant varieties through the formal varietal release system. This guide on PVS will complement the various training programs given by IRRI for plant breeders, agronomists, and extension workers engaged in rice varietal development and dissemination.

Rice Productivity and Food Security in India

Rice Productivity and Food Security in India
Author: Poornima Varma
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2017-07-11
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9811036926

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This book contributes to the adoption of agricultural technology in general and to literature on the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) in particular by identifying the factors that influence the decision to adopt SRI and examining SRI’s impact on household income and yield. The study also discusses the importance of SRI in achieving higher rice productivity and food security. Conducted on behalf of the Government of India’s Ministry of Agriculture from October 2014 to March 2016, the study collected detailed and extensive household-level data. As the second largest producer and consumer, India plays an important role in the global rice economy. Food security in India has been traditionally defined as having a sufficient supply of rice at an affordable price. However, in recent years rice cultivation in India has suffered from several interrelated problems. Increased yields achieved during the green revolution period and with the help of input-intensive methods involving high water and fertiliser use are now showing signs of stagnation and concomitant environmental problems due to salinisation and waterlogging of fields. Water resources are also limited; as such, water for irrigation must contend with increasing industrial and urban needs. As a result of all these factors, rice farmers have experienced a downturn in productivity growth. Since increasing the area of rice cultivation is not feasible, the additional production has to be achieved using less land, less water and fewer additional inputs. The new intensification methods for rice cultivation known as the System of Rice Intensification (SRI), which originated in Madagascar, offer a promising systemic approach to enhancing rice production at affordable costs by simultaneously reducing input requirements and causing less harm to the environment. The SRI approach is expected to enhance yield and substantially reduce water and other input requirements by altering plant, soil, water and nutrient management practices. With SRI taking firm root in India, the book examines and analyses the adoption and the economic impact of SRI in three major rice producing States of India: Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and Orissa.

Factors Influencing Hybrid Rice Adoption

Factors Influencing Hybrid Rice Adoption
Author: Khondoker Mottaleb
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

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As rice constitutes the major share in cereal consumption in South and East Asian countries that ranges from as low as 40 per cent in India to 97 per cent in Myanmar, to ensure food security, governments in these countries are encouraging farmers to adopt hybrid rice. This is mainly because hybrid rice provides a yield gain of 15-20 per cent over conventionally bred varieties in general. Yet, despite strenuous government efforts, farmers' adoption rates have remained low in India, Bangladesh and Vietnam compared with China. Although studies often claim that higher seed costs and inferior grain quality are the major factors limiting hybrid rice adoption, very few studies examine the importance of socio-economic factors and infrastructure in the adoption of hybrid rice. Using Bangladesh as a case, a comparative analysis has been made on the adoption of hybrid and modern varieties relative to traditional rice varieties and land allocation to these varieties. Econometric results indicate that general land characteristics, loan facilities and general infrastructure, such as roads, irrigation facilities and the availability of government-approved seed dealers, significantly influence the adoption of hybrid and modern rice varieties and land allocation to these varieties compared with traditional varieties.