| Bangladesh and CIMMYT:
Decades of partnership, commitment, and achievement
Work
by CIMMYT with researchers, extension workers, policymakers, and
farmers in Bangladesh for nearly four decades has helped establish
wheat and maize among the country's major cereal crops, made farming
systems more productive and sustainable, improved food security
and livelihoods, and won ringing praise from national decision makers
in agriculture, according to a recent report published by CIMMYT.
"CIMMYT is one of the leading centers of the
CGIAR
…working in Bangladesh since the early 70s…initiating
multi-dimensional work for varietal improvement, improved crop management,
conservation of natural resources, and human resource development,"
says Dr. Md. Nur-E-Elahi, Director General, Bangladesh
Rice Research Institute, citing the center's contributions to
the development of high-yielding maize and wheat varieties, wheat-rice
and maize-rice systems, whole-family training, small-scale farm
mechanization for conservation agriculture, and triticale (a wheat-rye
hybrid) for fodder. "CIMMYT's contributions to agricultural
research and development in Bangladesh are highly recognized."
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Building capacity among scientists
and farm families
More than 140 Bangladeshi wheat and maize scientists
and extensionists have taken part in courses at CIMMYT-Mexico
or come as visiting scientists in crop breeding, agronomy,
pathology, cereal technology, experiment station management,
seed production, economics, heat stress, and resource
conserving practices. Dozens of scientists from Bangladesh
have also attended conferences or international workshops
organized by the center and partners. Finally, joint
efforts in crop, soil, and water management research
over the last 20 years have added to expertise in Bangladesh.
More often than not, women and children
contribute substantively to farm activities, so CIMMYT
and the Wheat Research Centre (WRC) developed and refined
a whole-family-training
approach that has boosted adoption of improved cropping
practices. "We've reached over 27,000 women and
men farmers on maize and wheat production, and around
700 small-scale dairy farmers," says Anton Prokash
Adhikari, CIMMYT-Bangladesh Administrator. Follow-up
studies in 1996 among a randomly-selected subset of
families who attended training sessions showed a 90-100%
adoption of improved practices. After training, maize
farmers adopted a range of improved production practices,
planting the crop on more land and raising grain yields
by 0.8 tons per hectare. "This type of training
has raised the quality of farming in Bangladesh,"
says Adhikari. |
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With an average of over 1,000 inhabitants per square
kilometer, Bangladesh is among the world's most densely-populated
countries, and nearly two-thirds of its people work in agriculture.
The country furnishes a case study for the future of farming in
developing countries: as a result of intensive cropping rotations,
every square centimeter of arable land is used 1.8 times a year,
and resources are stretched beyond what is normally considered "sustainable."
A recent
report on CIMMYT efforts in Bangladesh gives an interesting
account of how, through broad partnerships and sustained research
for farmers, an international agricultural center can help improve
farmers and consumers' lives.
Joint work brings food and
windfalls
"The last quarter century of work by a small team of dedicated
CIMMYT staff and their colleagues in Bangladesh national programs
has brought improvements in local and national income, food security,
human nutrition, and well-being," says agronomist Stephen Waddington,
who worked for CIMMYT in Bangladesh during 2005-2007. "This
is easily seen by any visitor to Bangladesh, where nowadays many
otherwise poor people regularly have wheat chapattis for their breakfast,
a glass of milk from triticale fodder-fed cows for their lunch,
and maize-fed chicken, eggs, or fish for their dinner."
Bangladesh emerged on the map of significant wheat-growing
countries in the 1980s, according to Waddington. "Wheat became
the second major cereal after rice, contributing to food security
and human nutrition, and improving the livelihoods of resource-poor
farmers and urban consumers," he says. "Nineteen of the
twenty-four wheat varieties released in Bangladesh carry CIMMYT
lines in their backgrounds." Much crop management and soil
research for wheat was conducted in joint Bangladesh Wheat Research
Center (WRC)-CIMMYT programs.
With climate change, enter
maize and alternative crops
After playing a crucial role in Bangladesh agriculture, wheat production
has declined in recent years, due chiefly to higher temperatures
that hamper grain filling and incubate wheat diseases. But maize
has become increasingly popular, partly in response to rising demand
from the poultry sector for feed. "Last year farmers produced
1.3 million tons of maize, and output
and interest are growing ," says Enamul Haque, Senior Program
Officer for CIMMYT-Bangladesh. "Maize fits well in Bangladesh's
climate, soils, and intensive farming systems."
Again, CIMMYT has helped in a big way, providing improved
maize lines adapted to local conditions, offering expertise in hybrid-based
maize breeding and crop management research, helping to promote
dialogue on enabling policies that foster productivity and effective
markets. "Six out of the seven maize hybrids released by the
Bangladesh
Agricultural Research Institute, in recent years contain CIMMYT
maize lines, and there is significant use of CIMMYT maize by emerging
private breeding companies," says Haque.
Finally, in recent years, triticale has become a source
of high-quality green fodder for small-scale dairy producers during
the cool, dry, winter season. "Dual-purpose fodder and grain
triticale can produce 7 to 12 tons per hectare of fresh fodder,
and as much as 2 tons per hectare of grain for poultry feed or for
chapattis," says Haque. All triticale varieties sown in Bangladesh
come from CIMMYT.
Mechanization and resource-conserving
practices
Within the last decade or so, agriculture in Bangladesh has become
highly-mechanized: 8 of 10 farmers use two-wheel tractors, which
are more apt for their small and scattered land holdings than the
four-wheel variety. Since 1995, Haque has worked with the WRC and
local organizations to
promote a varied set of implements for reduced, more efficient
tillage and seeding. One key aim has been to enable farmers to sow
wheat or other crops directly after rice harvest in a single day—instead
of after two weeks of back-breaking, fuel-hungry plowing—thus
saving money and allowing the new crop to mature before the pre-monsoon
heat shrivels the grain.

Craig Meisner (left), a CIMMYT wheat agronomist
during 1990-2005, contributed significantly to CIMMYT's presence,
partnerships, and achievements in Bangladesh. |
"To date thousands of farmers have adopted a
small, two-wheel tractor-driven implement that tills, seeds, and
covers the seed in a single pass," says Haque. "This reduces
turn-around between crops by 50%, cuts costs 15-20%, saves 30% in
irrigation water and 25% in seed, and improves fertilizer efficiency—all
this, as well as increasing yields by 20%, for wheat." Owners
of the single-pass seeding implement often hire out their services,
earning USD 1,000-2,000 a year and each helping 20-100 other farmers
to obtain the above-mentioned benefits. In addition, the reduced
tillage implement and practices help address labor shortages that
constrain farm operations at peak times, and are opening lucrative
opportunities for machinery manufacturing and repair businesses.
For the future, CIMMYT staff are testing and promoting
with researchers and farmers the use of permanent, raised beds and
straw retention systems that can increase yields as much as 50%
in intensive, wheat-maize-rice cropping sequences. Future activities
of CIMMYT-Bangladesh will also focus on strengthening wheat and
maize breeding programs, system-based research and resource-conserving
practices, and the use of maize as food, fodder, and feed. "We'd
also like to do more capacity building, study soil health and nutrition,
and better disseminate useful technologies to farmers and extension
agents," Haque says, "but much depends on the resources
available."
Extensive partnerships key
to past and future success
"CIMMYT has worked with national programs, NGOs, the private
sector, farmers, donors, and policy planners," says Md. Harun-ur-Rashid,
Executive Chairman, Bangladesh Agricultural Research Council, and
Director General, Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute. "These
joint programs have accumulated an impressive array of achievements
and benefits."
In addition to the key partners cited above, CIMMYT
has worked with agricultural universities in Bangladesh, the Department
of Agricultural Extension, the Bangladesh Livestock Research
Institute, the Soil
Resource Development Institute, the Bangladesh
Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC), the Bangladesh Chashi Kollan
Samity, the Bangladesh
Institute of Nuclear Agriculture, Deoel Agro Industries Complex
Ltd., and the Mahbub
Engineering Workshop at Jamalpur. IRRI;
ILRI;
ICRISAT;
IFDC;
FAO;
Murdoch
University, ACIAR,
and CSIRO,
in Australia; Cornell
University, Texas
A&M University,
Winrock International, and the
Helen Keller Foundation, USDA,
in the USA.
For more information: Enamul
Haque, Senior Program Manager, CIMMYT-Bangladesh (e.haque@cgiar.org)
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