Al Mahmoud Hasan says triticale fills an
important gap in is farming system |
Gap filler
Triticale finds a niche in Bangladesh
“This is just what I was looking for,”
says Al Mahmoud Hasan, a farmer near the town or Rangpur in Bangladesh.
“I wanted a crop to fill the fallow gap between the rice crops.”
In Bangladesh rice is king, with farmers often growing
two rice crops a year. Now, in a pilot project funded by the Danish
development agency, Danida, a new crop is making its debut. The
aim of the on-farm trials is to see if triticale can make a difference
in the lives of Bangladeshi farm families who keep dairy cattle.
Triticale is a cross between wheat and rye that CIMMYT
researchers and partners have improved and promoted over recent
decades. It makes good animal fodder because its leaves and stem
are high in protein. In Bangladesh triticale was virtually unknown.
Cows can eat Napier grass when it is in season but feed mostly on
a diet of dry rice straw, a poor quality fodder. CIMMYT researchers
realized that even in the intense cropping system in Bangladesh,
there might be room for triticale as a high-quality cattle forage,
filling a gap in the cropping season and a gap in cattle diets.
During the rainy season virtually every farmer in
Bangladesh grows aman or monsoon rice. Then during the
dry season they usually grow another rice crop (called boro),
wheat, or even tobacco. Triticale can fit that second crop niche.
The idea is to plant triticale as early as possible after the rice
harvest and then cut it at 30 days and again at 50 days. The green
cuttings are used as fodder. When the crop does mature, the grain
can be used to feed chickens or ground and combined with wheat flour
for Chapatti, the standard flat bread of south Asia.
Rokeya Begum has cash and 20% more milk
from triticale-fed cows. |
Farmers who grow two full rice crops also have an
option with triticale. That is because there is a 60 day fallow
period between the two rice crops. It isn’t enough time for
triticale to mature and produce grain, but it is long enough to
produce good green fodder. That is exactly what Al Mahmoud Hasan
is doing. He and his family were among 120 households participating
in the trials throughout Bangladesh. He, his wife and his two oldest
children received instruction in triticale cultivation as part of
a whole family training system organized by CIMMYT and partners.
Participation and training has paid off for other farmers, including
Rokeya Begum and her family. She sold her first triticale cut to
neighbors and used the money to buy new clothes for an important
religious festival. Mrs Begum also says her cows are giving 20%
more milk on triticale than they did on a diet of rice straw.
The triticale seed for the trials came from CIMMYT
in Mexico. The one-year pilot project is near its end and the data
are not yet analyzed but reports from participating farmers are
encouraging. Many like Mrs. Begum say their neighbors will buy seed
from them for next season so they too can try triticale.
For further information contact Stephen Waddington
(s.waddington@cgiar.org)
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