Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks

Suspending horticulture in sacks above the ground can result in higher levels of productivity for vegetables when the challenges of unfertile or saline soil, flooding, waterlogging, and land and water constraints are regularly encountered. Previously used feed and fertilizer sacks are filled with a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: WorldFish
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51378
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author WorldFish
author_browse WorldFish
author_facet WorldFish
author_sort WorldFish
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Suspending horticulture in sacks above the ground can result in higher levels of productivity for vegetables when the challenges of unfertile or saline soil, flooding, waterlogging, and land and water constraints are regularly encountered. Previously used feed and fertilizer sacks are filled with a high-productivity soil mixture. Vegetables are grown on the top and/or in holes cut into the sides of the sacks. While growing vegetables in sacks has existed for many years in Bangladesh, the technique has been modified by WorldFish in collaboration with farmer researchers. This new approach is highly effective in helping families adapt to salinity intrusion and waterlogging by suspending agriculture production 60 centimeters (cm) off the ground.
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spelling CGSpace513782024-05-15T05:19:02Z Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks WorldFish climate agriculture vegetable growing horticulture Suspending horticulture in sacks above the ground can result in higher levels of productivity for vegetables when the challenges of unfertile or saline soil, flooding, waterlogging, and land and water constraints are regularly encountered. Previously used feed and fertilizer sacks are filled with a high-productivity soil mixture. Vegetables are grown on the top and/or in holes cut into the sides of the sacks. While growing vegetables in sacks has existed for many years in Bangladesh, the technique has been modified by WorldFish in collaboration with farmer researchers. This new approach is highly effective in helping families adapt to salinity intrusion and waterlogging by suspending agriculture production 60 centimeters (cm) off the ground. 2014 2014-11-06T13:11:29Z 2014-11-06T13:11:29Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51378 en Open Access application/pdf WorldFish. 2014. Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks. Dhaka, Bangladesh: WorldFish.
spellingShingle climate
agriculture
vegetable growing
horticulture
WorldFish
Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks
title Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks
title_full Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks
title_fullStr Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks
title_full_unstemmed Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks
title_short Vertical agriculture: Homestead horticulture suspended in sacks
title_sort vertical agriculture homestead horticulture suspended in sacks
topic climate
agriculture
vegetable growing
horticulture
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51378
work_keys_str_mv AT worldfish verticalagriculturehomesteadhorticulturesuspendedinsacks