SciDev.net: An agricultural technique known as 'zero tillage' has reduced the demand for water in rice and wheat farming on almost a million hectares of land in Bangladesh, India and Pakistan.
Scientists from the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) and the Rice Wheat Consortium for the Indo-Gangetic Plains — a network of scientists and nongovernmental organisations — carried out the investigation. Their work is highlighted in the World Bank's 'World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development', published on 19 October.
This is the first time in 25 years that agriculture's role in development has been the focus in the World Bank's annual development report. It calls for increased funding for agricultural research and for making agriculture central to the development agenda.
Rice and wheat are important for southern
The scientists introduced zero tillage — also known as conservation tillage — to farmers in the region. Zero-tillage involves planting seeds into soil that hasn't been tilled after the harvest of the previous crop. The wheat seeds germinate in residual water left by the rice crop, saving up to a million litres of water per hectare.
Atique Rehman, an agricultural student at the
The report also highlights researchers' efforts to produce drought-tolerant maize for
SciDev.net: An agricultural technique known as 'zero tillage' has reduced the demand for water in rice and wheat farming on almost a million hectares of land in Bangladesh, India and Pakistan.
Scientists from the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) and the Rice Wheat Consortium for the Indo-Gangetic Plains — a network of scientists and nongovernmental organisations — carried out the investigation. Their work is highlighted in the World Bank's 'World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development', published on 19 October.
This is the first time in 25 years that agriculture's role in development has been the focus in the World Bank's annual development report. It calls for increased funding for agricultural research and for making agriculture central to the development agenda.
Rice and wheat are important for southern
The scientists introduced zero tillage — also known as conservation tillage — to farmers in the region. Zero-tillage involves planting seeds into soil that hasn't been tilled after the harvest of the previous crop. The wheat seeds germinate in residual water left by the rice crop, saving up to a million litres of water per hectare.
Atique Rehman, an agricultural student at the
The report also highlights researchers' efforts to produce drought-tolerant maize for
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