Gathala, Mahesh, K., Jagadish Timsina, Md. Saiful Islam, Md. Mahbubur Rahman, Md. Israil Hossain, Harun Ar Rashid, Anup K Ghosh, Timothy J Krupnik, Thakur P. Tiwari, and Andrew McDonald. 2015. Conservation agriculture based tillage and crop establishment options can maintain farmers' yields and increase profits in South Asia's rice-maize systems: Evidence from Bangladesh. Field Crops Research. 172: 85-92.
doi:/10.1016/j.fcr.2014.12.003
Compares rice-maize and rice-rice systems in Bangladesh since maize is more profitable as the poultry industry grows. The objective of this study was to evaluate the productivity and profitability of R–M systems under CA-based tillage and crop establishment options across a gradient of 69 farmers’ fields in Northwest Bangladesh. They evaluated four tillage and crop establishment options: reduced tillage; strip tillage; fresh beds; and permanent beds. Conventional-tilled (puddled) transplanted rice on flat followed by conventional-tilled maize on flat was included as a current practice. They conclude that both rice and maize planted sequentially on permanent beds and strip tillage can result in higher net income and benefit-cost ratio compared to conventional tillage practice.
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