River waste to goldmine: A tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of Bangladesh

Floating agriculture transforms marshy lands into productive resources, enhancing food security and rural incomes in climate-vulnerable areas. While prior research highlights its potential as a climate-resilient practice, gaps remain in understanding the determinants of adoption and long-term liveli...

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Autores principales: Sarker, Mou Rani, Kundu, Nanda Dulal, Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan, Salman, Md, McKenzie, Andrew M., Islam, Md. Monjurul, Rahman, Md. Alimur, Uddin, Md. Taj, Bhandari, Humnath, Sarkar, Md. Abdur Rouf
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178563
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author Sarker, Mou Rani
Kundu, Nanda Dulal
Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan
Salman, Md
McKenzie, Andrew M.
Islam, Md. Monjurul
Rahman, Md. Alimur
Uddin, Md. Taj
Bhandari, Humnath
Sarkar, Md. Abdur Rouf
author_browse Bhandari, Humnath
Islam, Md. Monjurul
Kundu, Nanda Dulal
McKenzie, Andrew M.
Rahman, Md. Alimur
Salman, Md
Sarkar, Md. Abdur Rouf
Sarker, Mou Rani
Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan
Uddin, Md. Taj
author_facet Sarker, Mou Rani
Kundu, Nanda Dulal
Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan
Salman, Md
McKenzie, Andrew M.
Islam, Md. Monjurul
Rahman, Md. Alimur
Uddin, Md. Taj
Bhandari, Humnath
Sarkar, Md. Abdur Rouf
author_sort Sarker, Mou Rani
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Floating agriculture transforms marshy lands into productive resources, enhancing food security and rural incomes in climate-vulnerable areas. While prior research highlights its potential as a climate-resilient practice, gaps remain in understanding the determinants of adoption and long-term livelihood impacts. Our study addresses these gaps by examining farming procedures, profitability, impacts, and the key drivers and challenges influencing floating agriculture adoption in southern Bangladesh. Data was collected from 158 farmers using a pre-tested questionnaire between October 2018 and April 2019. Profit function and logit regression models were applied to analyze profitability and socio-economic determinants, complemented by qualitative methods and causal loop diagrams to assess impacts. Findings reveal that farmers employ both intercropping and monocropping, with a preference for seedling raising (156.37 USD/100 m2) over vegetable cultivation (121.56 USD/100 m2) due to higher profitability. Despite its labor-intensive nature (73% labor costs for seedling rising vs. 85% for vegetable cultivation), floating agriculture boosts household income, meets local vegetable demand, and reduces reliance on external markets during shocks. Additionally, it provides ecological benefits such as waterweed management and reduced environmental pollution. Floating agriculture also alleviates poverty by enhancing agricultural production and generating a positive feedback loop of increased income, food availability, and improved nutrition and health. Adoption is influenced by age, experience, family size, income diversity, credit access, extension services, and market proximity. However, high capital costs, limited credit, market volatility, and biotic/abiotic stresses pose challenges. To scale up floating agriculture, policy measures should focus on financial support, technical training, cost-effective innovations, and fostering cooperative farming. Institutional backing is crucial for promoting this sustainable cleaner production practice in flood-prone regions of Bangladesh and similar global contexts.
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publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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spelling CGSpace1785632025-12-05T02:12:45Z River waste to goldmine: A tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of Bangladesh Sarker, Mou Rani Kundu, Nanda Dulal Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan Salman, Md McKenzie, Andrew M. Islam, Md. Monjurul Rahman, Md. Alimur Uddin, Md. Taj Bhandari, Humnath Sarkar, Md. Abdur Rouf climate adaptation farming systems profitability floating gardens agriculture farmers surveys food security Floating agriculture transforms marshy lands into productive resources, enhancing food security and rural incomes in climate-vulnerable areas. While prior research highlights its potential as a climate-resilient practice, gaps remain in understanding the determinants of adoption and long-term livelihood impacts. Our study addresses these gaps by examining farming procedures, profitability, impacts, and the key drivers and challenges influencing floating agriculture adoption in southern Bangladesh. Data was collected from 158 farmers using a pre-tested questionnaire between October 2018 and April 2019. Profit function and logit regression models were applied to analyze profitability and socio-economic determinants, complemented by qualitative methods and causal loop diagrams to assess impacts. Findings reveal that farmers employ both intercropping and monocropping, with a preference for seedling raising (156.37 USD/100 m2) over vegetable cultivation (121.56 USD/100 m2) due to higher profitability. Despite its labor-intensive nature (73% labor costs for seedling rising vs. 85% for vegetable cultivation), floating agriculture boosts household income, meets local vegetable demand, and reduces reliance on external markets during shocks. Additionally, it provides ecological benefits such as waterweed management and reduced environmental pollution. Floating agriculture also alleviates poverty by enhancing agricultural production and generating a positive feedback loop of increased income, food availability, and improved nutrition and health. Adoption is influenced by age, experience, family size, income diversity, credit access, extension services, and market proximity. However, high capital costs, limited credit, market volatility, and biotic/abiotic stresses pose challenges. To scale up floating agriculture, policy measures should focus on financial support, technical training, cost-effective innovations, and fostering cooperative farming. Institutional backing is crucial for promoting this sustainable cleaner production practice in flood-prone regions of Bangladesh and similar global contexts. 2025-04 2025-12-04T20:10:12Z 2025-12-04T20:10:12Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178563 en Open Access application/pdf Sarker, Mou Rani, Nanda Dulal Kundu, Md Hayder Khan Sujan, Md Salman, Andrew M. McKenzie, Md Monjurul Islam, Md Alimur Rahman, Md Taj Uddin, Humnath Bhandari, and Md Abdur Rouf Sarkar. "River Waste to Goldmine: A Tale of Floating Agriculture in Vulnerable Southern Regions of Bangladesh." Food and Energy Security 14, no. 2 (2025): e70062. https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.70062
spellingShingle climate adaptation
farming systems
profitability
floating gardens
agriculture
farmers
surveys
food security
Sarker, Mou Rani
Kundu, Nanda Dulal
Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan
Salman, Md
McKenzie, Andrew M.
Islam, Md. Monjurul
Rahman, Md. Alimur
Uddin, Md. Taj
Bhandari, Humnath
Sarkar, Md. Abdur Rouf
River waste to goldmine: A tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of Bangladesh
title River waste to goldmine: A tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of Bangladesh
title_full River waste to goldmine: A tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of Bangladesh
title_fullStr River waste to goldmine: A tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed River waste to goldmine: A tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of Bangladesh
title_short River waste to goldmine: A tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of Bangladesh
title_sort river waste to goldmine a tale of floating agriculture in vulnerable southern regions of bangladesh
topic climate adaptation
farming systems
profitability
floating gardens
agriculture
farmers
surveys
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178563
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