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| Celebration as Bangladesh produces more lentil | ||||||||||||||||
Lentil is the number one preferred pulse in Bangladesh; however, domestic production satisfies less than half the countrys needs. Therefore, the Pulses Research Center of the Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute (BARI) and ICARDA are working together to develop improved technologies to help resource-poor farmers of Bangladesh. The major constraint to lentil improvement in Bangladesh was the lack of variability, especially in the key traits that contribute to higher yield and disease resistance. The obvious solution was to introduce the desired traits through breeding, using exotic germplasm. But Bangladeshs lentil is a short-duration type which matures within 100-110 days, causing an asynchrony in the flowering of the local cultivars and those of exotic origin. It was decided that hybridization was the best way forward. ICARDA was requested to produce crosses specifically for Bangladesh, making use of the countrys improved landraces and ICARDA germplasm with resistance to Stemphylium blight and rust the most damaging lentil diseases in Bangladesh. In consultation with national breeders, crosses were made at ICARDA under an extended photoperiod (18 hours plus) to improve synchrony in flowering and facilitate crossing with Bangladesh landraces. Wide crosses were made and many desirable genes were introgressed including those for disease resistance. The breaking of this ancient bottleneck of narrow genetic base of lentil in South Asia represents a major scientific achievement. The introgression of rust and Stemphylium blight resistant genes of exotic origin led to the development of Barimasur-4 lentil variety. This is the most widely adopted variety in the country and it produces an average mean seed yield of 2300 kg/ha compared with 1800 kg/ha of Barimasur-2. It has a 53% advantage over the standard check, Uthfala.
Increased lentil productivity has made a major contribution to alleviating poverty and malnutrition, and improving the countrys economy. An impact analysis found that the extra income earned from lentil cultivation was used by farmers to buy clothes (15.6%), personal items (19.5%), rice and other foods (9.9%), seed for the next crop (16.6%), childrens education (14.8%), medical treatment (13.7%), to pay off loans (5.8%), and other purposes, such as purchasing cattle, threshers, making brick houses, and repairing farm implements (4.1%). To celebrate the successes achieved through the BARI-ICARDA partnership, BARI organized the BARI-ICARDA Friendship Day on 14 February 2004 in Dhaka. ICARDA was represented by the Director General, Prof. Dr Adel El-Beltagy; the Assistant Director General (Research), Dr William Erskine; and Lentil Breeder, Dr Ashutosh Sarker. H.E. Mr M.K. Anwar, Minister of Agriculture, Bangladesh, was the Chief Guest. Other senior officials included: Dr Mohammad N. Alam, Executive Chairman, Bangladesh Agricultural Research Council; Mr Tarique Hassain, Director General, Department of Agricultural Extension; Dr Shariful Islam, Chairman, Bangladesh Agricultural Development Corporation; Prof. Abdul Halim, Vice-Chancellor, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University; Mr A.S.M. Abdul Halim, Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture; Dr Abdul Hamid, Director General Bangladesh Institute of Nuclear Agriculture; Dr M.M. Rahman, Director of Research, BARI; and Mr Abul Hussain, Director, Pulses Research Center. Farmers, scientists and representatives of national and international development organizations also participated in the event. Prof. Dr Adel El-Beltagy, who gave a presentation on ICARDAs contribution to food and nutritional security in the developing world, thanked the donor agencies, including CIDA, IDRC and ACIAR, whose support for pulse research in the last two decades, has helped Bangladesh develop improved lentil varieties and production technologies, which have been adopted by farmers. He emphasized the need for collaboration between BARI and ICARDA in other areas, such as genetic enhancement of barley, grass pea, and kabuli chickpea.
As part of the Friendship Day celebration, Prof. El-Beltagy presented a commemorative plaque to the Minister of Agriculture, the Director General, BARI, the Chairman of BARC, and the Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture to acknowledge their support to the ICARDA/Bangladesh collaborative program. The Minister presented awards to two farmers, Mohammad Abdul Sattar and Mohammad Shajahan, who produced up to 2.7 t/ha of lentil using Barimasur-4. Seven scientists, including Drs Willie Erskine and Ashutosh Sarker from ICARDA, also received recognition from the Minister for their contribution to improving the welfare of marginal farmers in Bangladesh through lentil improvement. |
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© 2008 International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA).
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