Rice planting system in Nepal - Precision Agriculture, SOIL4213
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Transcript Rice planting system in Nepal - Precision Agriculture, SOIL4213
Rice planting system in Nepal
Arjun Pandey
Department of plant and soil science
Oklahoma State University
Outline
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Introduction
Agriculture in Nepal
Rice Planting System
SRI and Conventional
Method
• Problems
• Conclusion
Introduction:
Background:
Area of Nepal-147181sq. Km.
Total farming Population-65%
23% of total area is the most fertile land where cereal production is mainly
concentrated.
Agriculture Contributes to about 33.8% to national GDP.(World Bank,2010)
Provides part and fulltime employment opportunities to 65.5% of its
population.
Elevation ranges from 70 m (230 ft) to 8848 m (29,029 ft) above sea level.
Tremendous variation in climate (tropical to temperate) as a result of
variation in altitude. There are four main climatic seasons:
Spring : March-May
Summer : June-August
Autumn : September-November
Winter : December-February
Physiographic Regions and Cropping
System
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Himalayan
High mountain
Middle mountain
Siwalik
Terai
Agriculture in Nepal
Among agriculture crops rice is main crop, cultivated on nearly 1.55 M Ha of
lands.
Total production of rice 2008/09 was 4.3 millions of tons, with average
productivity of 2907kg/ha(world average is about 4204kg/ha)
Problems of rice cultivation
• Older generation of seeds
• High Production cost
• Low doses of fertilizers
• Manual/bullock- Based cultivation
• Fraction of land(small holding=0.24ha)
• Distribution of land
• Low Irrigation facility
• Poor Farmers(% of population below international poverty line of
US$1.25 per day, 1994-2008*=55) (Unicef,2010)
Rice cultivation system:
Upland rice cultivation:- 9% of total rice
cultivation area is under upland.
Lowland rice cultivation:
Major practice
Cultivated 2 times in a year
Different methods of rice planting
• Direct planting- In Nepal it is not
practiced yet, and research is going on.
• Transplanting
Two ways of transplanting is popular in
Nepal.
Conventional Transplanting
Modern Transplanting(SRI)
Conventional Rice Transplanting
System
• Farmers Use more than
60 kg of seeds/ha
• Transplant very old
seedlings(30-45 days)
• Plants many seedlings
8-10/hill.
Modern Rice Planting System(SRI)
• System of Rice Intensification-Evolved in
Madagascar, over 20-yr period
• In Nepal introduced in 1998
• One seedling per hill.
Why SRI ??
Area Production and Yield inNepal
10
5
yield
production
area
8
4
Area/Yield/Production
6
4
2
0
3
2
1
0
2009
2007
2005
2003
2000
Year
SRI Yield (T/Ha)
Conventional Yields (T/Ha)
1995
1990
1985
PRACTICE/PURCHASE
SEED
COST
CONVENTIONAL
RICE(RS/HA)
COSTS,SRI
RICE(RS/HA)
DIFFERENCE(RS/H
A)
125
1250
1125
50
500
450
LAND PREPARATION
7500
7500
0
COMPOST
4800
2400
-2400
FERTILIZERS
1500
3000
1500
TRANSPLANTING
1250
1500
250
IRRIGATION
200
400
200
WEEDING
750
1350
600
PESTICIDE
0
500
500
HARVESTING
1750
1500
-250
TOTAL COST
17925
19900
1975
REVENUE,GRAIN
60450
23250
-37200
3000
3000
0
TOTAL REVENUE
63450
26250
-37200
NETPROFIT
45525
6350
-39175
NURSERY PREPARATION
REVENUE,BY PRODUCT
Five Principles of SRI
Comparisons of factor effects:
• Young seedling
8 days-6.28 t/ha
vs.
20 days-3.80 t/ha
• Water management effect
Water control -5.75 t/ha vs.
Flooding- 4.34 t/ha
• Fertilization
Compost-5.49 t/ha
vs. NPK fertilizer -4.48 t/ha
• Plants per hill effect
1 plant/hill- 5.43 t/ha vs. 3 plants/hill- 4.65 t/ha
• Spacing effect
30x30cm- 5.08 t/ha vs.
25x25 cm 5.00 t/ha
source-Uphoff, 2006
Twelve Techniques of SRI
Nursery Preparation
Marking the area
Uprooting Seedlings
Planting on the spot
Intercultural operation
Technology Promotion
Leaf Color Chart
Urea Super Granule
Seed Production and Preservation
Alternate Wet and Dry(AWD) irrigation System
Pheromone trap
http://wn.com/samardeen17
Conclusion
SRI method is found to be more productive than
conventional method
Main components for higher yield of rice is younger
seedlings, fewer seedlings /hill, wider spacing and AWD
irrigation
Tools and machines supply/availability for making and
weeding are every useful for adopting
SRI in larger areas