Intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of Eastern India

Conventionally managed rice-wheat systems of the eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains (E-IGP) that rely on soil puddling for rice and intensive tillage for wheat are low-yielding and resource-inefficient, leading to low profitability. While a host of alternative tillage and crop establishment (TCE) methods have been advocated as solutions for sustainably enhancing productivity and profitability, few systematic comparisons of these methods are reported. To address this gap, a three-year field study was conducted in Bihar, India with the goal of identifying TCE methods for rice-wheat systems that are high yielding, less resource-intensive, and more profitable. The following systems were evaluated: 1) puddled transplanted rice (PTR) followed by (fb) conventional tillage wheat (CTW) or zero-tillage wheat (ZTW); 2) machine transplanted rice in non-puddled soil (MTR) fb ZTW; 3) the system of rice intensification (SRI) fb system of wheat intensification (SWI); and 4) dry-seeded rice (DSR) fb ZTW. Rice cultivar duration (short versus medium-duration) was incorporated as a subplot treatment in all systems. Rice yields were similar with all methods, except DSR yield was 11 % lower and MTR yield was 7% higher than PTR in the third year. Cost of production was US$ 149 and 77 ha−1 lower in DSR and MTR, respectively, and US$ 84 ha-1 higher in SRI than PTR. The gross margin and benefit-cost (B:C) ratio was highest in MTR followed by DSR and lowest in SRI. In wheat, ZT resulted in a higher yield than CTW, especially when ZTW was cultivated after non-puddled rice (e.g., DSR or MTR). ZTW reduced production costs by US$ 69 ha-1, whereas SWI increased it by US$ 139 ha-1 relative to CTW. The higher yield and lower cost of production resulted in a higher gross margin (US$ 82−355 ha−1 and US$ 129−409 ha−1 higher than CTW and SWI, respectively) and a higher B:C ratio in ZTW treatments than CTW and SWI. At the system level, MTR or DSR followed by ZTW had both superior crop yields and consistently higher gross margins (US $133 to 382 ha-1) than other practices. On the other hand, the SRI fb SWI system had no yield advantage and poorer economic performance than conventional practices. In all systems, the inclusion of a medium-duration rice hybrid resulted in higher rice and system yields. These results suggest that significant gains in profitability are possible with emerging TCE practices in rice-wheat systems, but alternatives such as the SRI and SWI will likely erode farmer incomes.

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Main Authors: Singh, M., Kumar, P., Kumar, V., Solanki, I.S., McDonald, A., Kumar, A., Poonia, S.P., Anurag Ajay, Singh, D.K., Singh, B., Singh, S., Malik, R.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, Machine Transplanting, Non-Puddled Rice, Puddled Transplanted Rice, System of Rice Intensification, System of Wheat Intensification, PUDDLING, RICE, WHEAT, INTENSIFICATION, ZERO TILLAGE,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/21192
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-211922023-03-16T15:46:40Z Intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of Eastern India Singh, M. Kumar, P. Kumar, V. Solanki, I.S. McDonald, A. Kumar, A. Poonia, S.P. Kumar, V. Anurag Ajay Kumar, A. Singh, D.K. Singh, B. Singh, S. Malik, R. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY Machine Transplanting Non-Puddled Rice Puddled Transplanted Rice System of Rice Intensification System of Wheat Intensification PUDDLING RICE WHEAT INTENSIFICATION ZERO TILLAGE Conventionally managed rice-wheat systems of the eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains (E-IGP) that rely on soil puddling for rice and intensive tillage for wheat are low-yielding and resource-inefficient, leading to low profitability. While a host of alternative tillage and crop establishment (TCE) methods have been advocated as solutions for sustainably enhancing productivity and profitability, few systematic comparisons of these methods are reported. To address this gap, a three-year field study was conducted in Bihar, India with the goal of identifying TCE methods for rice-wheat systems that are high yielding, less resource-intensive, and more profitable. The following systems were evaluated: 1) puddled transplanted rice (PTR) followed by (fb) conventional tillage wheat (CTW) or zero-tillage wheat (ZTW); 2) machine transplanted rice in non-puddled soil (MTR) fb ZTW; 3) the system of rice intensification (SRI) fb system of wheat intensification (SWI); and 4) dry-seeded rice (DSR) fb ZTW. Rice cultivar duration (short versus medium-duration) was incorporated as a subplot treatment in all systems. Rice yields were similar with all methods, except DSR yield was 11 % lower and MTR yield was 7% higher than PTR in the third year. Cost of production was US$ 149 and 77 ha−1 lower in DSR and MTR, respectively, and US$ 84 ha-1 higher in SRI than PTR. The gross margin and benefit-cost (B:C) ratio was highest in MTR followed by DSR and lowest in SRI. In wheat, ZT resulted in a higher yield than CTW, especially when ZTW was cultivated after non-puddled rice (e.g., DSR or MTR). ZTW reduced production costs by US$ 69 ha-1, whereas SWI increased it by US$ 139 ha-1 relative to CTW. The higher yield and lower cost of production resulted in a higher gross margin (US$ 82−355 ha−1 and US$ 129−409 ha−1 higher than CTW and SWI, respectively) and a higher B:C ratio in ZTW treatments than CTW and SWI. At the system level, MTR or DSR followed by ZTW had both superior crop yields and consistently higher gross margins (US $133 to 382 ha-1) than other practices. On the other hand, the SRI fb SWI system had no yield advantage and poorer economic performance than conventional practices. In all systems, the inclusion of a medium-duration rice hybrid resulted in higher rice and system yields. These results suggest that significant gains in profitability are possible with emerging TCE practices in rice-wheat systems, but alternatives such as the SRI and SWI will likely erode farmer incomes. 2021-01-29T01:25:15Z 2021-01-29T01:25:15Z 2020 Article Published Version https://hdl.handle.net/10883/21192 10.1016/j.fcr.2020.107776 English https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378429019316776?via%3Dihub#sec0155 CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose Open Access India Amsterdam (Netherlands) Elsevier 250 0378-4290 Field Crops Research 107776
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country México
countrycode MX
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access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Machine Transplanting
Non-Puddled Rice
Puddled Transplanted Rice
System of Rice Intensification
System of Wheat Intensification
PUDDLING
RICE
WHEAT
INTENSIFICATION
ZERO TILLAGE
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Machine Transplanting
Non-Puddled Rice
Puddled Transplanted Rice
System of Rice Intensification
System of Wheat Intensification
PUDDLING
RICE
WHEAT
INTENSIFICATION
ZERO TILLAGE
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Machine Transplanting
Non-Puddled Rice
Puddled Transplanted Rice
System of Rice Intensification
System of Wheat Intensification
PUDDLING
RICE
WHEAT
INTENSIFICATION
ZERO TILLAGE
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Machine Transplanting
Non-Puddled Rice
Puddled Transplanted Rice
System of Rice Intensification
System of Wheat Intensification
PUDDLING
RICE
WHEAT
INTENSIFICATION
ZERO TILLAGE
Singh, M.
Kumar, P.
Kumar, V.
Solanki, I.S.
McDonald, A.
Kumar, A.
Poonia, S.P.
Kumar, V.
Anurag Ajay
Kumar, A.
Singh, D.K.
Singh, B.
Singh, S.
Malik, R.
Intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of Eastern India
description Conventionally managed rice-wheat systems of the eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains (E-IGP) that rely on soil puddling for rice and intensive tillage for wheat are low-yielding and resource-inefficient, leading to low profitability. While a host of alternative tillage and crop establishment (TCE) methods have been advocated as solutions for sustainably enhancing productivity and profitability, few systematic comparisons of these methods are reported. To address this gap, a three-year field study was conducted in Bihar, India with the goal of identifying TCE methods for rice-wheat systems that are high yielding, less resource-intensive, and more profitable. The following systems were evaluated: 1) puddled transplanted rice (PTR) followed by (fb) conventional tillage wheat (CTW) or zero-tillage wheat (ZTW); 2) machine transplanted rice in non-puddled soil (MTR) fb ZTW; 3) the system of rice intensification (SRI) fb system of wheat intensification (SWI); and 4) dry-seeded rice (DSR) fb ZTW. Rice cultivar duration (short versus medium-duration) was incorporated as a subplot treatment in all systems. Rice yields were similar with all methods, except DSR yield was 11 % lower and MTR yield was 7% higher than PTR in the third year. Cost of production was US$ 149 and 77 ha−1 lower in DSR and MTR, respectively, and US$ 84 ha-1 higher in SRI than PTR. The gross margin and benefit-cost (B:C) ratio was highest in MTR followed by DSR and lowest in SRI. In wheat, ZT resulted in a higher yield than CTW, especially when ZTW was cultivated after non-puddled rice (e.g., DSR or MTR). ZTW reduced production costs by US$ 69 ha-1, whereas SWI increased it by US$ 139 ha-1 relative to CTW. The higher yield and lower cost of production resulted in a higher gross margin (US$ 82−355 ha−1 and US$ 129−409 ha−1 higher than CTW and SWI, respectively) and a higher B:C ratio in ZTW treatments than CTW and SWI. At the system level, MTR or DSR followed by ZTW had both superior crop yields and consistently higher gross margins (US $133 to 382 ha-1) than other practices. On the other hand, the SRI fb SWI system had no yield advantage and poorer economic performance than conventional practices. In all systems, the inclusion of a medium-duration rice hybrid resulted in higher rice and system yields. These results suggest that significant gains in profitability are possible with emerging TCE practices in rice-wheat systems, but alternatives such as the SRI and SWI will likely erode farmer incomes.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Machine Transplanting
Non-Puddled Rice
Puddled Transplanted Rice
System of Rice Intensification
System of Wheat Intensification
PUDDLING
RICE
WHEAT
INTENSIFICATION
ZERO TILLAGE
author Singh, M.
Kumar, P.
Kumar, V.
Solanki, I.S.
McDonald, A.
Kumar, A.
Poonia, S.P.
Kumar, V.
Anurag Ajay
Kumar, A.
Singh, D.K.
Singh, B.
Singh, S.
Malik, R.
author_facet Singh, M.
Kumar, P.
Kumar, V.
Solanki, I.S.
McDonald, A.
Kumar, A.
Poonia, S.P.
Kumar, V.
Anurag Ajay
Kumar, A.
Singh, D.K.
Singh, B.
Singh, S.
Malik, R.
author_sort Singh, M.
title Intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of Eastern India
title_short Intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of Eastern India
title_full Intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of Eastern India
title_fullStr Intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of Eastern India
title_full_unstemmed Intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of Eastern India
title_sort intercomparison of crop establishment methods for improving yield and profitability in the rice-wheat system of eastern india
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/21192
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