Agronomic improvements can make future cereal systems in South Asia far more productive and result in a lower environmental footprint
South Asian countries will have to double their food production by 2050 while using resources more efficiently and minimizing environmental problems. Transformative management approaches and technology solutions will be required in the major grain-producing areas that provide the basis for future food and nutrition security. This study was conducted in four locations representing major food production systems of densely populated regions of South Asia. Novel production-scale research platforms were established to assess and optimize three futuristic cropping systems and management scenarios (S2, S3, S4) in comparison with current management (S1). With best agronomic management practices (BMPs), including conservation agriculture (CA) and cropping system diversification, the productivity of rice- and wheat-based cropping systems of South Asia increased substantially, whereas the global warming potential intensity (GWPi) decreased. Positive economic returns and less use of water, labor, nitrogen, and fossil fuel energy per unit food produced were achieved. In comparison with S1, S4, in which BMPs, CA and crop diversification were implemented in the most integrated manner, achieved 54% higher grain energy yield with a 104% increase in economic returns, 35% lower total water input, and a 43% lower GWPi. Conservation agriculture practices were most suitable for intensifying as well as diversifying wheat-rice rotations, but less so for rice-rice systems. This finding also highlights the need for characterizing areas suitable for CA and subsequent technology targeting. A comprehensive baseline dataset generated in this study will allow the prediction of extending benefits to a larger scale.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Not Open Access |
| Additional information | No Pink Form ORCHID ID orcid.org/0000-0002-5783-7480 Sharma [Ladha, Jagdish Kumar; Rao, Adusumilli Narayana; Raman, Anitha K.; Sharma, Sheetal; Reddy, Chinnagangannagari Kesava] Int Rice Res Inst, 1st Floor,CG Block,NASC Complex,DPS Marg, New Delhi 110012, India; [Padre, Agnes Tirol; Kumar, Virender] IRRI, DAPO Box 7777, Manila 1301, Philippines; [Dobermann, Achim] Rothamsted Res, Harpenden AL5 2JQ, Herts, England; [Gathala, Mahesh] CIMMYT Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr, Dhaka, Bangladesh; [Saharawat, Yashpal] Indian Agr Res Inst, Pusa Campus, New Delhi 110012, India; [Piepho, Hans Peter] Univ Hohenheim, Biostat Unit, D-70593 Stuttgart, Germany; [Alam, Md Mursedul] IRRI, Bangladesh Off, House 9,Rd 2-2, Dhaka 1213, Bangladesh; [Liak, Ranjan] Rajendra Agr Univ, Samastipur 848125, Bihar, India; [Rajendran, Ramasamy] Tamil Nadu Rice Res Inst, Thanjavur 612101, Tamil Nadu, India; [Parsad, Rajender] Indian Agr Res Inst, Lib Ave, New Delhi 110012, India; [Sharma, Parbodh C.] Cent Soil Salin Res Inst, Zarifa Farm, Kachhwa Rd, Karnal 132001, Haryana, India; [Singh, Sati Shankar] ICAR Parisar, PO Bihar Vet Coll,ICAR Res Complex Eastern Reg, Patna 800014, Bihar, India; [Saha, Abhijit] Bangladesh Rice Res Inst, Gazipur 1701, Bangladesh; [Noor, Shamsoon] Bangladesh Agr Res Inst, Gazipur 1701, Bangladesh |
| Keywords | biodiversity conservation, Ecology, Environmental Sciences |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:53 |
| Last Modified | 21 Jan 2026 17:20 |
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