Increasing food diversity and nutritional yield: evaluating diverse cropping systems. A field study in Chapainawabganj District in Bangladesh
Citation
Islam, S., Cheesman, S., Shanto, M. H., Rahaman, M. A., Hossain, K., Barman, J. C., Gathala, M. K., & Krupnik, T. J. (2024). Increasing food diversity and nutritional yield: evaluating diverse cropping systems—A field study in Chapainawabganj District in Bangladesh. Research Note 43. TAFSSA. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/35373
Abstract/Description
Over the past two decades, Bangladesh has made significant strides in food production, particularly in rice, the country's primary crop (ADB, 2023). However, many people still lack access to a nutritious and diverse diet. Diets remain imbalanced, with rice contributing around 70% of total energy intake (BBS, 2010). The increased production of high-yielding cereals like rice, maize, and wheat has replaced more nutrient-rich cereals like millet, oats, and sorghum. New approaches are needed to produce nutrient-rich foods while using land efficiently. A farmers' participatory research trial was conducted in Chapainawabganj, and a research brief summarizes the results of the nutrition yield of diverse, intensified cropping systems compared to farmers’ common practices from 2022–23 in Chapainawabganj, Bangladesh.
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Author ORCID identifiers
Mahesh K Gathala; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8282-2953
Timothy Joseph Krupnik https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6973-0106
