Evaluation of Forage Legumes and Intercropping System in Nepal

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Evaluation of forage legumes and intercropping system for improved productivity of maize on mid hills of Nepal

Among cereal crops, maize is the second staple food crops after rice grown in 80% of the hilly areas. Low land and irrigated land in Terai (Plain region) and lower to mid hills are characterized by rice based farming system with wheat, maize and cash crops as secondary product whereas upland and non-irrigated (mainly hills) is characterized by a maize based farming system (Paudel, Lamsal et al. 2011). Mixed crop livestock farming is predominant in mid hills of Nepal characterized by dominance of maize based cropping system, intensive cultivation, high degree of subsistence and close integration between crops, livestock and forest (Dhungana, Tripathee et al. 2012).The mid-hills of Nepal are characterized by complex and labour-intensive farming systems with low returns. About 70% of arable land in the hills can be classed as unirrigated hill slopes (bari land), and only about 30% is irrigated (khet land). Soil fertility under the traditional farming system has been maintained by repeated addition of various amounts of organic compost/manure that comes from livestock, ranging from 3 to 21 mt/ha/annum (Paudel 1992). But this seems to be not enough for nutrient balance to get enough productivity. Next to crop sector, livestock is the second most dominant subsector of the agriculture sector accounting for 29 % of AGDP and almost two third of the agriculture households in the country rear cattle as a source of income, draft power and manure (Joshy). In mid hill of Nepal livestock raising fulfil the nutrient demands by providing milk, meat, eggs, manure and draft power for the crop production as well as contributing to house hold economy but there is deleterious effect of over stocking and denudation of common grazing and forest land resource (Das and Shivakoti 2006). Fragmentation of land is major characteristics in Nepal. As the population grows the plot get further subdivided due to inherence, sales and other form of transaction. The NLSS (CBS 1997) shows the average holding of 1.22 ha in the mountain, 0.89 ha in the hills and 1.29 ha in the terai of which majority of land holding is small holders (Maskey, Sharma et al. 2003). Increasing migration is also one of the livelihood strategy of farm household in rural mid hill of Nepal which results in neglecting subsistence farming and in addition when the house hold income is insufficient farmers shows more interest in livestock farming than cropping farming (Maharjan, Bauer et al.

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