SITE SUITABILITY ANALYSIS FOR DISSEMINATION OF SALT-TOLERANT RICE VARIETIES IN SOUTHERN BANGLADESH

被引:6
|
作者
Sinha, D. D. [1 ]
Singh, A. N. [1 ]
Singh, U. S. [1 ]
机构
[1] IRRI, India Off, New Delhi 110012, India
来源
关键词
IRRI; Salt-tolerant rice varieties; Rice suitability map; Remote Sensing & GIS;
D O I
10.5194/isprsarchives-XL-8-961-2014
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Bangladesh is a country of 14.4 million ha geographical area and has a population density of more than 1100 persons per sq. km. Rice is the staple food crop, growing on about 72% of the total cultivated land and continues to be the most important crop for food security of the country. A project "Sustainable Rice Seed Production and Delivery Systems for Southern Bangladesh" has been executed by the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in twenty southern districts of Bangladesh. These districts grow rice in about 2.9 million ha out of the country's total rice area of 11.3 million ha. The project aims at contributing to the Government of Bangladesh's efforts in improving national and household food security through enhanced and sustained productivity by using salinity-, submergence- and drought- tolerant and high yielding rice varieties. Out of the 20 project districts, 12 coastal districts are affected by the problem of soil salinity. The salt-affected area in Bangladesh has increased from about 0.83 million ha in 1973 to 1.02 million ha in 2000, and 1.05 million ha in 2009 due to the influence of cyclonic storms like 'Sidr', 'Laila' and others, leading to salt water intrusion in croplands. Three salinity-tolerant rice varieties have recently been bred by IRRI and field tested and released by the Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI) and Bangladesh Institute of Nuclear Agriculture (BINA). These varieties are BRRI dhan-47 and Bina dhan-8 and - 10. However, they can tolerate soil salinity level up to EC 8-10 dSm(-1), whereas the EC of soils in several areas are much higher. Therefore, a large scale dissemination of these varieties can be done only when a site suitability analysis of the area is carried out. The present study was taken up with the objective of preparing the site suitability of the salt-tolerant varieties for the salinity-affected districts of southern Bangladesh. Soil salinity map prepared by Soil Resources Development Institute of Bangladesh shows five classes of salinity. viz., non-saline with some very slight saline soil, very slightly saline with some slight saline soil, slightly saline with some moderately saline soil, strongly saline with some moderately saline soil, and very strongly saline with some strongly saline soil. The soil EC level of different classes range from 2 dSm(-1) to > 16 dSm(-1). The soil map was geo-referenced and digitized using Arc GIS. Salinity tolerance characteristics of the rice varieties were matched with the soil characteristics shown on the map. Three suitability classes were made; soils suitable for salt-tolerant varieties, not suitable for salt-tolerant varieties due to high soil salinity, and suitable for other high yielding varieties due to slight salinity. The mauza (smallest revenue unit) boundary provided by the Bangladesh Agriculture Research Council was also geo-referenced and digitized in the same projection. Overlaying and intersecting the mauza boundary on the soil suitability map provided the suitable and not suitable mauzas. A total of 4070 mauzas in the 12 salinity-affected districts were listed and maps showing suitability of mauza prepared. About 0.6 million ha out of total 0.87 million ha salinity affected area were found suitable for growing the salinity-tolerant BRRI dhan-47, Bina dhan-8 and -10 in these districts. The maps and other generated information have helped the Dept. of Agriculture Extension (DAE) of Bangladesh in large scale dissemination of seeds of the salinity-tolerant rice varieties in different districts during the past two years.
引用
收藏
页码:961 / 966
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Analysis of genetic diversity of salt-tolerant alfalfa germplasms
    Jiang, J.
    Yang, B. L.
    Xia, T.
    Yu, S. M.
    Wu, Y. N.
    Jin, H.
    Li, J. R.
    GENETICS AND MOLECULAR RESEARCH, 2015, 14 (02) : 4438 - 4447
  • [32] Genetic analysis of salt-tolerant mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana
    Quesada, V
    Ponce, MR
    Micol, JL
    GENETICS, 2000, 154 (01) : 421 - 436
  • [33] Development of early maturing submergence-tolerant rice varieties for Bangladesh
    Iftekharuddaula, Rhandakar M.
    Ahmed, Helal U.
    Ghosal, Sharmistha
    Amin, Al
    Moni, Zakiah R.
    Ray, Bisnu P.
    Barman, Hirendra N.
    Siddique, Muhammad A.
    Collard, Bertrand C. Y.
    Septiningsih, Endang M.
    FIELD CROPS RESEARCH, 2016, 190 : 44 - 53
  • [34] Stress Tolerance Profiling of a Collection of Extant Salt-Tolerant Rice Varieties and Transgenic Plants Overexpressing Abiotic Stress Tolerance Genes
    Kurotani, Ken-ichi
    Yamanaka, Kazumasa
    Toda, Yosuke
    Ogawa, Daisuke
    Tanaka, Maiko
    Kozawa, Hirotsugu
    Nakamura, Hidemitsu
    Hakata, Makoto
    Ichikawa, Hiroaki
    Hattori, Tsukaho
    Takeda, Shin
    PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY, 2015, 56 (10) : 1867 - 1876
  • [35] Application of Silica Nanoparticles Improved the Growth, Yield, and Grain Quality of Two Salt-Tolerant Rice Varieties under Saline Irrigation
    Jin, Wenyu
    Li, Lin
    He, Wenli
    Wei, Zhongwei
    PLANTS-BASEL, 2024, 13 (17):
  • [36] Salt tolerance of in vitro established salt-tolerant rice plants during further growth in soil
    Miki, Y
    Katoh, M
    Hisajima, S
    BIOLOGIA PLANTARUM, 2001, 44 (03) : 463 - 466
  • [37] Screening salt-tolerant rice at the seedling and reproductive stages: An effective and reliable approach
    Tabassum, Raisa
    Tahjib-Ul-Arif, Md
    Hasanuzzaman, Md
    Sohag, Abdullah Al Mamun
    Islam, Md Saiful
    Shafi, S. M. Shaffat Hossan
    Islam, Mirza Mofazzal
    Hassan, Lutful
    ENVIRONMENTAL AND EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2021, 192
  • [38] Differential gene expression in salt-tolerant rice mutant and its parental variety
    张劲松
    周骏马
    张驰
    陈受宜
    Science in China(Series C:Life Sciences), 1996, (03) : 310 - 319
  • [39] Differential gene expression in salt-tolerant rice mutant and its parental variety
    Zhang, JS
    Zhou, JM
    Zhang, C
    Chen, SY
    SCIENCE IN CHINA SERIES C-LIFE SCIENCES, 1996, 39 (03): : 310 - 319
  • [40] Identification of molecular markers linked to salt-tolerant genes at germination stage of rice
    Mardani, Z.
    Rabiei, B.
    Sabouri, H.
    Sabouri, A.
    PLANT BREEDING, 2014, 133 (02) : 196 - 202