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Poster in Nov 04, 2024 12:45:10

How the farmers of Bangladesh called to protect the health of the soil

How the farmers of Bangladesh called to protect the health of the soil

Photo: Collected

Scientists and experts urged grassroots farmers to protect soil health from further degradation through balanced dose fertilization in the Barind area. Wide-ranging promotion of balanced fertilization can be the crucial means of boosting crop production by protecting soil health from further degradation.

Utmost emphasis should be given to habituating the grassroots farmers towards soil test-based balanced fertilization. There would be no fertilizer crisis in the country if the farmers were enriched with the knowledge of balanced fertilization, the experts added.

Agricultural and soil health experts came up with the observation while addressing a daylong farmers training and view-sharing meeting titled "Acidic Soil Management after using the Upazila Land and Soil Resources Guideline" here today (26 Oct 2024).

The Divisional Office of the Soil Resource Development Institute (SRDI) organized the training for 25 promising farmers at the CARB Centre in Godagari Upazila in the district supported by the Acidic Soil Management Programme. Chairman of Barind Multipurpose Development Authority Dr Asaduzzaman addressed the meeting as chief guest with SRDI Director Dr Begum Samia Sultana in the chair.

SRDI Principal Scientific Officer Dr Nurul Islam addressed the training session as the focal person mentioning that excessive fertilization always causes increasing pest attacks on crops and diseases followed by yield loss besides damaging soil fertility balance, declining crop quality, and market price. Apart from this, excessive use of TSP, DAP, and Potash is detrimental to other food elements of crops in the soil leading to yield loss, misuse of money, and affecting soil health.

The Soil Health Expert called for creating awareness among farmers on using appropriate and balanced fertilizer in soil to enhance productivity as well as protect public health. In his remarks, Dr Asaduzzaman said lesser use of organic matter and little or no use of leguminous green manure and bio-fertilizers have also been detected as degradable factors. However, soil test-based fertilization has become indispensable to maintain soil properties positive to the growth of plants, he said.

In the training, the participants were given knowledge related to detecting spurious fertilizer and sample analysis, available mobile soil test laboratory facilities to detect soil productivity and degradation, and fertilizer-using guidelines. On the occasion, balanced dose fertilizer cards were distributed among the 25 farmers.

Source: Online/GFMM

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