Adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal Bangladesh

While numerous studies have documented the benefits of conservation agriculture (CA) in South Asia, most focus on favorable environments where farmers have reliable access to energy supporting irrigation and inputs. The performance of CA in South Asia’s under-developed coastal environments is comparatively understudied. In these environments, farmers are increasingly interested in growing a second crop to meet food security and income generation objectives in rotation following the predominant monsoon season rice crop, though labor, energy costs, and investment constraints limit their ability to do so. We hypothesized that rotating rice (Oryza sativa) with maize (Zea mays) using conservation agriculture, or CA (i.e., strip-tilled maize followed by unpuddled transplanted rice), or seasonally alternating tillage (SAT, i.e., strip-tilled maize followed by fully-tilled, puddled rice with residues retained across rotations) would reduce costs and energy use, increase energy-use efficiency, and reduce yield-scaled CO2-eq emissions (YSE) and total global warming potential (GWP), compared to farmers’ own practices (FP) and conventional full-tillage (CT) under the same rotation in Bangladesh’s coastal region. Starting with winter maize followed by summer rice, we evaluated four tillage and crop establishment treatments in farmer-managed experiments in partially irrigated and rainfed environments over three years in 35 farmer’s fields across Bangladesh’s coastal districts. Treatments included FP, CT, complete CA, and SAT under a rice-maize rotation. Across years, the full suite of CA practices and SAT were significantly more energy-efficient and energy-productive than FP or CT. The order of YSE in rice was CA< CT or FP < SAT while in maize, it was CA or SAT < FP < CT. Across environments, CA and SAT resulted in 15-18% higher yield at the cropping systems level (maize and rice yields combined) and 26-40% less manual labor than CT or FP. CA and SAT also reduced by 1-12% and 33-35% total production costs respective to CT and FP. This was associated with 13-17% greater grain energy output in CA and SAT, and 2-18% lower YSE, compared to CT or FP. While our data suggest that both CA and SAT can result in a range of positive agronomic, economic, and environmental outcomes compared to FP or CT, post-trial surveys and discussions with farmers revealed a strong practical aversion to use of the full suite of CA practices and preference for adapted practices due to logistical constraints in negotiating the hire of laborers for unpuddled manual transplanting.

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Main Authors: Krupnik, T.J., Hossain, M.K, Timsina, J., Gathala, M.K., Sapkota, T.B., Samina Yasmin, Shahjahan, M., Hossain, F., Alanuzzaman Kurishi, A.S.M., Miah, A.A., Saidur Rahman, B.M., McDonald, A.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, Energy Productivity, Energy-Use Efficiency, Global Warming Potential, Yield-Scaled Emissions, Multicriteria Assessment, On-Farm Experiment, ENERGY CONSUMPTION, GLOBAL WARMING, ON-FARM RESEARCH, YIELDS,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22153
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id dig-cimmyt-10883-22153
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institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Energy Productivity
Energy-Use Efficiency
Global Warming Potential
Yield-Scaled Emissions
Multicriteria Assessment
On-Farm Experiment
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
GLOBAL WARMING
ON-FARM RESEARCH
YIELDS
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Energy Productivity
Energy-Use Efficiency
Global Warming Potential
Yield-Scaled Emissions
Multicriteria Assessment
On-Farm Experiment
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
GLOBAL WARMING
ON-FARM RESEARCH
YIELDS
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Energy Productivity
Energy-Use Efficiency
Global Warming Potential
Yield-Scaled Emissions
Multicriteria Assessment
On-Farm Experiment
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
GLOBAL WARMING
ON-FARM RESEARCH
YIELDS
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Energy Productivity
Energy-Use Efficiency
Global Warming Potential
Yield-Scaled Emissions
Multicriteria Assessment
On-Farm Experiment
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
GLOBAL WARMING
ON-FARM RESEARCH
YIELDS
Krupnik, T.J.
Hossain, M.K
Timsina, J.
Gathala, M.K.
Sapkota, T.B.
Samina Yasmin
Shahjahan, M.
Hossain, F.
Alanuzzaman Kurishi, A.S.M.
Miah, A.A.
Saidur Rahman, B.M.
McDonald, A.
Adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal Bangladesh
description While numerous studies have documented the benefits of conservation agriculture (CA) in South Asia, most focus on favorable environments where farmers have reliable access to energy supporting irrigation and inputs. The performance of CA in South Asia’s under-developed coastal environments is comparatively understudied. In these environments, farmers are increasingly interested in growing a second crop to meet food security and income generation objectives in rotation following the predominant monsoon season rice crop, though labor, energy costs, and investment constraints limit their ability to do so. We hypothesized that rotating rice (Oryza sativa) with maize (Zea mays) using conservation agriculture, or CA (i.e., strip-tilled maize followed by unpuddled transplanted rice), or seasonally alternating tillage (SAT, i.e., strip-tilled maize followed by fully-tilled, puddled rice with residues retained across rotations) would reduce costs and energy use, increase energy-use efficiency, and reduce yield-scaled CO2-eq emissions (YSE) and total global warming potential (GWP), compared to farmers’ own practices (FP) and conventional full-tillage (CT) under the same rotation in Bangladesh’s coastal region. Starting with winter maize followed by summer rice, we evaluated four tillage and crop establishment treatments in farmer-managed experiments in partially irrigated and rainfed environments over three years in 35 farmer’s fields across Bangladesh’s coastal districts. Treatments included FP, CT, complete CA, and SAT under a rice-maize rotation. Across years, the full suite of CA practices and SAT were significantly more energy-efficient and energy-productive than FP or CT. The order of YSE in rice was CA< CT or FP < SAT while in maize, it was CA or SAT < FP < CT. Across environments, CA and SAT resulted in 15-18% higher yield at the cropping systems level (maize and rice yields combined) and 26-40% less manual labor than CT or FP. CA and SAT also reduced by 1-12% and 33-35% total production costs respective to CT and FP. This was associated with 13-17% greater grain energy output in CA and SAT, and 2-18% lower YSE, compared to CT or FP. While our data suggest that both CA and SAT can result in a range of positive agronomic, economic, and environmental outcomes compared to FP or CT, post-trial surveys and discussions with farmers revealed a strong practical aversion to use of the full suite of CA practices and preference for adapted practices due to logistical constraints in negotiating the hire of laborers for unpuddled manual transplanting.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Energy Productivity
Energy-Use Efficiency
Global Warming Potential
Yield-Scaled Emissions
Multicriteria Assessment
On-Farm Experiment
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
GLOBAL WARMING
ON-FARM RESEARCH
YIELDS
author Krupnik, T.J.
Hossain, M.K
Timsina, J.
Gathala, M.K.
Sapkota, T.B.
Samina Yasmin
Shahjahan, M.
Hossain, F.
Alanuzzaman Kurishi, A.S.M.
Miah, A.A.
Saidur Rahman, B.M.
McDonald, A.
author_facet Krupnik, T.J.
Hossain, M.K
Timsina, J.
Gathala, M.K.
Sapkota, T.B.
Samina Yasmin
Shahjahan, M.
Hossain, F.
Alanuzzaman Kurishi, A.S.M.
Miah, A.A.
Saidur Rahman, B.M.
McDonald, A.
author_sort Krupnik, T.J.
title Adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal Bangladesh
title_short Adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal Bangladesh
title_full Adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal Bangladesh
title_fullStr Adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal Bangladesh
title_sort adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal bangladesh
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22153
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-221532024-01-24T15:11:26Z Adapted conservation agriculture practices can increase energy productivity and lower yield-scaled greenhouse gas emissions in coastal Bangladesh Krupnik, T.J. Hossain, M.K Timsina, J. Gathala, M.K. Sapkota, T.B. Samina Yasmin Shahjahan, M. Hossain, F. Alanuzzaman Kurishi, A.S.M. Miah, A.A. Saidur Rahman, B.M. McDonald, A. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY Energy Productivity Energy-Use Efficiency Global Warming Potential Yield-Scaled Emissions Multicriteria Assessment On-Farm Experiment ENERGY CONSUMPTION GLOBAL WARMING ON-FARM RESEARCH YIELDS While numerous studies have documented the benefits of conservation agriculture (CA) in South Asia, most focus on favorable environments where farmers have reliable access to energy supporting irrigation and inputs. The performance of CA in South Asia’s under-developed coastal environments is comparatively understudied. In these environments, farmers are increasingly interested in growing a second crop to meet food security and income generation objectives in rotation following the predominant monsoon season rice crop, though labor, energy costs, and investment constraints limit their ability to do so. We hypothesized that rotating rice (Oryza sativa) with maize (Zea mays) using conservation agriculture, or CA (i.e., strip-tilled maize followed by unpuddled transplanted rice), or seasonally alternating tillage (SAT, i.e., strip-tilled maize followed by fully-tilled, puddled rice with residues retained across rotations) would reduce costs and energy use, increase energy-use efficiency, and reduce yield-scaled CO2-eq emissions (YSE) and total global warming potential (GWP), compared to farmers’ own practices (FP) and conventional full-tillage (CT) under the same rotation in Bangladesh’s coastal region. Starting with winter maize followed by summer rice, we evaluated four tillage and crop establishment treatments in farmer-managed experiments in partially irrigated and rainfed environments over three years in 35 farmer’s fields across Bangladesh’s coastal districts. Treatments included FP, CT, complete CA, and SAT under a rice-maize rotation. Across years, the full suite of CA practices and SAT were significantly more energy-efficient and energy-productive than FP or CT. The order of YSE in rice was CA< CT or FP < SAT while in maize, it was CA or SAT < FP < CT. Across environments, CA and SAT resulted in 15-18% higher yield at the cropping systems level (maize and rice yields combined) and 26-40% less manual labor than CT or FP. CA and SAT also reduced by 1-12% and 33-35% total production costs respective to CT and FP. This was associated with 13-17% greater grain energy output in CA and SAT, and 2-18% lower YSE, compared to CT or FP. While our data suggest that both CA and SAT can result in a range of positive agronomic, economic, and environmental outcomes compared to FP or CT, post-trial surveys and discussions with farmers revealed a strong practical aversion to use of the full suite of CA practices and preference for adapted practices due to logistical constraints in negotiating the hire of laborers for unpuddled manual transplanting. 2022-08-30T00:25:12Z 2022-08-30T00:25:12Z 2022 Article Published Version https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22153 10.3389/fagro.2022.829737 English https://figshare.com/collections/Adapted_Conservation_Agriculture_Practices_Can_Increase_Energy_Productivity_and_Lower_Yield-Scaled_Greenhouse_Gas_Emissions_in_Coastal_Bangladesh/6091647 Nutrition, health & food security Transforming Agrifood Systems in South Asia Resilient Agrifood Systems United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126441 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 Bangladesh Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A. 4 2673-3218 Frontiers in Agronomy 829737