Climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in Nepal

Lentil (Lens culinaris Medik.) is a cool-season pulse grown in winter cropping cycle in South Asia and provides a major source of nutrition for many low-income households. Lentil productivity is perceived to be sensitive to high rainfall, but few studies document spatial and temporal patterns of yield variation across climate, soil, and agronomic gradients. Using farm survey data from Nepal, this study characterizes patterns of lentil productivity and efficiency for two cropping seasons. Additional insights were derived from on-farm trials conducted over a 5-year period that assess agronomic, drainage, and cultivar interventions. To contextualize the inferences derived from farm surveys and trials, the Stempedia model was used to simulate the severity of Stemphylium blight (Stemphylium botryosum) risk–the principal fungal disease in lentil–with 30 years of historical climate data. Although development efforts in Nepal have prioritized pulse intensification, results confirm that lentil remains a risky enterprise highlighting the prevalence of crop failures (16%), modest yields (353 kg ha-1), and low levels of profitability (US$ 33 ha-1) in wet winters. Nevertheless, site factors such as drainage class influence responses with upland sites performing well in wet winters and lowland sites performing well in dry winters. In wet winters, a phenomena perceived to be increasing, 76% of surveyed farmers reported significant disease pressure and simulations with Stempedia predict that conditions favoring Stemphylium occur in >60% of all years. Nevertheless, simulation results also suggest that these risks can be addressed through earlier planting. Based on the combined results, gains in yield, yield stability, and technical efficiency can be enhanced in western Nepal by: 1) ensuring timely lentil planting to mitigate climate-mediated disease risk, 2) evaluating new lentil lines that may provide enhanced resistance to diseases and waterlogging, and 3) encouraging the emergence of mechanization solutions to overcome labor bottlenecks.

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Main Authors: Paudel, G.P., Devkota, M., Keil, A., McDonald, A.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science 2020
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, CLIMATE, AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY, LENS CULINARIS, SEASONS,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/20981
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-209812023-12-07T15:09:57Z Climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in Nepal Paudel, G.P. Devkota, M. Keil, A. McDonald, A. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY CLIMATE AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY LENS CULINARIS SEASONS Lentil (Lens culinaris Medik.) is a cool-season pulse grown in winter cropping cycle in South Asia and provides a major source of nutrition for many low-income households. Lentil productivity is perceived to be sensitive to high rainfall, but few studies document spatial and temporal patterns of yield variation across climate, soil, and agronomic gradients. Using farm survey data from Nepal, this study characterizes patterns of lentil productivity and efficiency for two cropping seasons. Additional insights were derived from on-farm trials conducted over a 5-year period that assess agronomic, drainage, and cultivar interventions. To contextualize the inferences derived from farm surveys and trials, the Stempedia model was used to simulate the severity of Stemphylium blight (Stemphylium botryosum) risk–the principal fungal disease in lentil–with 30 years of historical climate data. Although development efforts in Nepal have prioritized pulse intensification, results confirm that lentil remains a risky enterprise highlighting the prevalence of crop failures (16%), modest yields (353 kg ha-1), and low levels of profitability (US$ 33 ha-1) in wet winters. Nevertheless, site factors such as drainage class influence responses with upland sites performing well in wet winters and lowland sites performing well in dry winters. In wet winters, a phenomena perceived to be increasing, 76% of surveyed farmers reported significant disease pressure and simulations with Stempedia predict that conditions favoring Stemphylium occur in >60% of all years. Nevertheless, simulation results also suggest that these risks can be addressed through earlier planting. Based on the combined results, gains in yield, yield stability, and technical efficiency can be enhanced in western Nepal by: 1) ensuring timely lentil planting to mitigate climate-mediated disease risk, 2) evaluating new lentil lines that may provide enhanced resistance to diseases and waterlogging, and 3) encouraging the emergence of mechanization solutions to overcome labor bottlenecks. 2020-10-10T00:25:13Z 2020-10-10T00:25:13Z 2020 Article Published Version https://hdl.handle.net/10883/20981 10.1371/journal.pone.0231377 English https://hdl.handle.net/11529/10548086 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Climate_and_landscape_mediate_patterns_of_low_lentil_productivity_in_Nepal/12139551 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 PDF Nepal San Francisco, CA (USA) Public Library of Science 4 15 1932-6203 PLoS ONE
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
CLIMATE
AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
LENS CULINARIS
SEASONS
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
CLIMATE
AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
LENS CULINARIS
SEASONS
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
CLIMATE
AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
LENS CULINARIS
SEASONS
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
CLIMATE
AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
LENS CULINARIS
SEASONS
Paudel, G.P.
Devkota, M.
Keil, A.
McDonald, A.
Climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in Nepal
description Lentil (Lens culinaris Medik.) is a cool-season pulse grown in winter cropping cycle in South Asia and provides a major source of nutrition for many low-income households. Lentil productivity is perceived to be sensitive to high rainfall, but few studies document spatial and temporal patterns of yield variation across climate, soil, and agronomic gradients. Using farm survey data from Nepal, this study characterizes patterns of lentil productivity and efficiency for two cropping seasons. Additional insights were derived from on-farm trials conducted over a 5-year period that assess agronomic, drainage, and cultivar interventions. To contextualize the inferences derived from farm surveys and trials, the Stempedia model was used to simulate the severity of Stemphylium blight (Stemphylium botryosum) risk–the principal fungal disease in lentil–with 30 years of historical climate data. Although development efforts in Nepal have prioritized pulse intensification, results confirm that lentil remains a risky enterprise highlighting the prevalence of crop failures (16%), modest yields (353 kg ha-1), and low levels of profitability (US$ 33 ha-1) in wet winters. Nevertheless, site factors such as drainage class influence responses with upland sites performing well in wet winters and lowland sites performing well in dry winters. In wet winters, a phenomena perceived to be increasing, 76% of surveyed farmers reported significant disease pressure and simulations with Stempedia predict that conditions favoring Stemphylium occur in >60% of all years. Nevertheless, simulation results also suggest that these risks can be addressed through earlier planting. Based on the combined results, gains in yield, yield stability, and technical efficiency can be enhanced in western Nepal by: 1) ensuring timely lentil planting to mitigate climate-mediated disease risk, 2) evaluating new lentil lines that may provide enhanced resistance to diseases and waterlogging, and 3) encouraging the emergence of mechanization solutions to overcome labor bottlenecks.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
CLIMATE
AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
LENS CULINARIS
SEASONS
author Paudel, G.P.
Devkota, M.
Keil, A.
McDonald, A.
author_facet Paudel, G.P.
Devkota, M.
Keil, A.
McDonald, A.
author_sort Paudel, G.P.
title Climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in Nepal
title_short Climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in Nepal
title_full Climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in Nepal
title_fullStr Climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in Nepal
title_sort climate and landscape mediate patterns of low lentil productivity in nepal
publisher Public Library of Science
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/20981
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AT devkotam climateandlandscapemediatepatternsoflowlentilproductivityinnepal
AT keila climateandlandscapemediatepatternsoflowlentilproductivityinnepal
AT mcdonalda climateandlandscapemediatepatternsoflowlentilproductivityinnepal
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