Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh

Context: Dry direct-seeded rice (DSR) has been identified as a potential crop establishment method to reduce labor, water, and energy use, as well as the carbon footprint and is considered as a climate-smart practice for rice production. However, the economic feasibility and farmers’ adoption of DSR...

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Autores principales: Ahmed, Sharif, Kumar, Virender, Asad Uz Zaman, Dewan, Mahbubur Rahman, Amina Khatun, Hossain, M. Khaled, Singh, Sudhanshu, Timsina, Jagadish, Krupnik, Timothy J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172995
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author Ahmed, Sharif
Kumar, Virender
Asad Uz Zaman
Dewan, Mahbubur Rahman
Amina Khatun
Hossain, M. Khaled
Singh, Sudhanshu
Timsina, Jagadish
Krupnik, Timothy J.
author_browse Ahmed, Sharif
Amina Khatun
Asad Uz Zaman
Dewan, Mahbubur Rahman
Hossain, M. Khaled
Krupnik, Timothy J.
Kumar, Virender
Singh, Sudhanshu
Timsina, Jagadish
author_facet Ahmed, Sharif
Kumar, Virender
Asad Uz Zaman
Dewan, Mahbubur Rahman
Amina Khatun
Hossain, M. Khaled
Singh, Sudhanshu
Timsina, Jagadish
Krupnik, Timothy J.
author_sort Ahmed, Sharif
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Context: Dry direct-seeded rice (DSR) has been identified as a potential crop establishment method to reduce labor, water, and energy use, as well as the carbon footprint and is considered as a climate-smart practice for rice production. However, the economic feasibility and farmers’ adoption of DSR will likely depend on its productivity compared to the dominant practice of puddled transplanted rice (PTR). Tillage and crop management practices, landscape position, and rice cultivars are also likely to influence DSR productivity, profitability, energy use, and global warming potential (GWP). While numerous studies have compared the performance of DSR with PTR, none have evaluated DSR across different landscape positions to identify the most suitable landscape for expansion of DSR. Methods: We conducted multilocation and multi-year trials comparing the performance of spring ‘aus’ season rice establishment methods (machine drilled DSR, broadcasted DSR, and PTR) using three rice varieties (BRRI dhan83, BRRI dhan85, and Binadhan-19) under three landscape positions (highland, medium highland, and lowland) in three distinct districts and agroecological zones of Bangladesh. We evaluated productivity, profitability, energy use efficiency (EUE), energy productivity (EP), GWP, and yield-scaled emissions of each of these tillage and crop establishment systems. Results: Our results showed that the DSR had a similar or slightly lower yield (2–8 %) than PTR, but with lower labor use (15–47 %), lower production cost (US$ ∼150 ha−1), and higher net profit. Drill-DSR yielded similar to PTR under highlands and medium highlands, but as 9–16 % lower when grown on lowlands. EUE and EP were 15–40 % higher in DSR than in PTR due to lower energy requirements. Higher energy use in PTR primarily resulted from extra energy required for nursery raising, transplanting, puddling, and irrigation. DSR was associated with lower GWP and yield-scaled emissions of 56 to 66 % compared to PTR. Conclusions: This study suggests that DSR can be a more environmentally sound, economically viable, and climate-smart production system, found more suitable for highland and medium-highland environments. However, for the widespread adoption of DSR in Bangladesh and South Asia as a whole, the nuiances of landscape position should be considered and appropriate technological, social, and policy-level interventions will be necessary.
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spelling CGSpace1729952025-12-08T09:54:28Z Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh Ahmed, Sharif Kumar, Virender Asad Uz Zaman Dewan, Mahbubur Rahman Amina Khatun Hossain, M. Khaled Singh, Sudhanshu Timsina, Jagadish Krupnik, Timothy J. climate-smart agriculture resource conservation tillage plant establishment emissions from agriculture rice Context: Dry direct-seeded rice (DSR) has been identified as a potential crop establishment method to reduce labor, water, and energy use, as well as the carbon footprint and is considered as a climate-smart practice for rice production. However, the economic feasibility and farmers’ adoption of DSR will likely depend on its productivity compared to the dominant practice of puddled transplanted rice (PTR). Tillage and crop management practices, landscape position, and rice cultivars are also likely to influence DSR productivity, profitability, energy use, and global warming potential (GWP). While numerous studies have compared the performance of DSR with PTR, none have evaluated DSR across different landscape positions to identify the most suitable landscape for expansion of DSR. Methods: We conducted multilocation and multi-year trials comparing the performance of spring ‘aus’ season rice establishment methods (machine drilled DSR, broadcasted DSR, and PTR) using three rice varieties (BRRI dhan83, BRRI dhan85, and Binadhan-19) under three landscape positions (highland, medium highland, and lowland) in three distinct districts and agroecological zones of Bangladesh. We evaluated productivity, profitability, energy use efficiency (EUE), energy productivity (EP), GWP, and yield-scaled emissions of each of these tillage and crop establishment systems. Results: Our results showed that the DSR had a similar or slightly lower yield (2–8 %) than PTR, but with lower labor use (15–47 %), lower production cost (US$ ∼150 ha−1), and higher net profit. Drill-DSR yielded similar to PTR under highlands and medium highlands, but as 9–16 % lower when grown on lowlands. EUE and EP were 15–40 % higher in DSR than in PTR due to lower energy requirements. Higher energy use in PTR primarily resulted from extra energy required for nursery raising, transplanting, puddling, and irrigation. DSR was associated with lower GWP and yield-scaled emissions of 56 to 66 % compared to PTR. Conclusions: This study suggests that DSR can be a more environmentally sound, economically viable, and climate-smart production system, found more suitable for highland and medium-highland environments. However, for the widespread adoption of DSR in Bangladesh and South Asia as a whole, the nuiances of landscape position should be considered and appropriate technological, social, and policy-level interventions will be necessary. 2025-03 2025-02-12T17:05:46Z 2025-02-12T17:05:46Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172995 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Ahmed, S., Kumar, V., Zaman, A. U., Dewan, M. R., Khatun, A., Hossain, K., Singh, S., Timsina, J., & Krupnik, T. J. (2025). Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh. Field Crops Research, 322, 109739. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2025.109739
spellingShingle climate-smart agriculture
resource conservation
tillage
plant establishment
emissions from agriculture
rice
Ahmed, Sharif
Kumar, Virender
Asad Uz Zaman
Dewan, Mahbubur Rahman
Amina Khatun
Hossain, M. Khaled
Singh, Sudhanshu
Timsina, Jagadish
Krupnik, Timothy J.
Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh
title Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh
title_full Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh
title_short Dry direct-seeded and broadcast rice: a profitable and climate-smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in Bangladesh
title_sort dry direct seeded and broadcast rice a profitable and climate smart alternative to puddled transplanted aus rice in bangladesh
topic climate-smart agriculture
resource conservation
tillage
plant establishment
emissions from agriculture
rice
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172995
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