Farmers’ Understanding about Impact of Climate Change on Cropping Systems and Nutrition: A study on Dingaputa Haor of Netrakona District in Bangladesh

Author:

Islam Md. Mafizul1,Sarker Uttam Kumer1ORCID,Monira Sirajam1,Kheya Sinthia Afsana1ORCID,Kaysar Md. Salahuddin1ORCID,Ali Md. Imran2,Salam Moin Us3ORCID,Hwang Hancheol4,Hashem Abeer5,Abd_Allah Elsayed Fathi6ORCID,Uddin Md. Romij1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agronomy, Bangladesh Agricultural University, Mymensingh 2202, Bangladesh

2. Jute Research Regional Station, Kishoreganj 2300, Bangladesh

3. Food and Agriculture Organization of United Nations, Dhaka 1213, Bangladesh

4. Department of Bioresources and Rural Systems Engineering, Hankyong National University, Suwon-si 17579, Republic of Korea

5. Botany and Microbiology Department, College of Science, King Saud University, P.O. Box. 2460, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia

6. Plant Production Department, College of Food and Agricultural Sciences, King Saud University, P.O. Box. 2460, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia

Abstract

With a view to creating an inventory of the existing climatic and nutritional condition of the haor (low-lying land) areas along with their cropping systems, this research was carried out in the Dingaputa haor of the Netrakona district of Bangladesh. The main objective was to study the farmers’ concept of climate change issues and their responses in respect to cropping systems and nutrition. This study is crucial for comparing the existing situation and taking future decisions. The feasibility and strategic direction of the present haor agriculture were evaluated using strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) analysis and matrices. The results showed that the farmers’ understanding of climate change was much lower than expected; a maximum of 73.2% farmers pointed out that climate change means frequent flooding, and more than 90% of farmers opined that temperature, early flooding, and lightning have increased over time. They strongly agreed that boro (dry-season-irrigated) rice is affected more frequently by natural hazards than in previous times. Very few farmers (only 14.4%) have taken adaptation strategies, which are less climate-smart and nutrition-sensitive. Only 10.8% of farmers cultivated oilseeds, pulses, and vegetables other than boro rice. A lack of technological knowledge is the main obstacle to practicing climate-resilient, modern cultivation practices. The trends of cultivation and consumption of vegetables by haor farmers are very low, whereas they are agreeable to cultivating nutrition-sensitive and high-value crops if they have technical support. The major strengths of haor agriculture are fertile soil and rice surplus, whereas weaknesses are monocropping and malnutrition.

Funder

Bangladesh Climate Change Trust

Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Bangladesh

King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Geography, Planning and Development,Building and Construction

Reference46 articles.

1. BHWDB (2012). Master Plan of Haor Area: Volume I Summary Report.

2. CEGIS (2012). Center for Environmental and Geographic Information Services, Bangladesh Haor and Wetland Development Board (BHWDB), Master Plan of Haor Areas, Main Report, Volume II. Ministry of Water Resources.

3. Haor Regions-Importance, Problems, Strategy and Future Development;Suvra;J. Econ. Financ.,2021

4. Flood vulnerability, local perception and gender role judgment using multivariate analysis: A problem-based “participatory action to future skill management” to cope with flood impacts;Rakib;Weather. Clim. Extrem.,2017

5. Cho, R. (2023, July 05). How Climate Change Impacts the Economy. Climate, State of the Planet, Earth Institute, Columbia University, 2019. Available online: https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2019/06/20/climate-change-economy-impacts/.

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