Article

Impacts of decentralized fish fingerling production in irrigated ricefields in Northwest Bangladesh

Details

Citation

Haque MM, Little DC, Barman BK, Wahab MA & Telfer T (2014) Impacts of decentralized fish fingerling production in irrigated ricefields in Northwest Bangladesh. Aquaculture Research, 45 (4), pp. 655-674. https://doi.org/10.1111/are.12000

Abstract
Rice field-based fish seed production (RFFSP) has become established in parts of Northwest Bangladesh (NWB) as part of promoting improved rice-based livelihoods. The impact of RFFSP on adopting households in terms of interactions of assets and other activities was assessed in a comparison of seed-producing (RF; producing (NRF; were sampled randomly and ranked as poor, intermediate and better-off. Adoption of RFFSP was not constrained by illiteracy of the household head, the size or ownership status of ponds, or lack of ownership of land or an irrigation pump. Poorer and intermediate households had smaller RF plots and lower production of fingerlings (kg per household) compared with the better-off, although production efficiency (kg han = 60) and nonseed-n = 58) households that Restocking of fingerlings in RF household ponds increased productivity by 60% over NRF. Fish consumption of better-off RF households exceeded NFR by 50%. Among the poor, seasonal benefits of income from sales and subsistence consumption of fingerlings were significant. Rice production in irrigated, and income in both irrigated and rain-fed seasons was higher, and production costs lower, in riceplots producing fish than in rice-only plots. Implications for supporting the innovation networks promoting and establishing RFFSP among rice growers, are discussed. was higher.

Keywords
livelihood impacts; decentralized fish fingerling; rice fish; Northwest Bangladesh

Journal
Aquaculture Research: Volume 45, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2014
Publication date online24/08/2012
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/11757
PublisherWiley-Blackwell
ISSN1355-557X

People (2)

People

Professor Dave Little

Professor Dave Little

Professor, Institute of Aquaculture

Professor Trevor Telfer

Professor Trevor Telfer

Professor, Institute of Aquaculture