Cropping system diversification for food production in Mindanao rubber plantations: a rice cultivar mixture and rice intercropped with mungbean

PeerJ. 2017 Feb 8:5:e2975. doi: 10.7717/peerj.2975. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

Including food production in non-food systems, such as rubber plantations and biofuel or bioenergy crops, may contribute to household food security. We evaluated the potential for planting rice, mungbean, rice cultivar mixtures, and rice intercropped with mungbean in young rubber plantations in experiments in the Arakan Valley of Mindanao in the Philippines. Rice mixtures consisted of two- or three-row strips of cultivar Dinorado, a cultivar with higher value but lower yield, and high-yielding cultivar UPL Ri-5. Rice and mungbean intercropping treatments consisted of different combinations of two- or three-row strips of rice and mungbean. We used generalized linear mixed models to evaluate the yield of each crop alone and in the mixture or intercropping treatments. We also evaluated a land equivalent ratio for yield, along with weed biomass (where Ageratum conyzoides was particularly abundant), the severity of disease caused by Magnaporthe oryzae and Cochliobolus miyabeanus, and rice bug (Leptocorisa acuta) abundance. We analyzed the yield ranking of each cropping system across site-year combinations to determine mean relative performance and yield stability. When weighted by their relative economic value, UPL Ri-5 had the highest mean performance, but with decreasing performance in low-yielding environments. A rice and mungbean intercropping system had the second highest performance, tied with high-value Dinorado but without decreasing relative performance in low-yielding environments. Rice and mungbean intercropped with rubber have been adopted by farmers in the Arakan Valley.

Keywords: Agricultural diversification; Agroforestry; Cultivar mixtures; Hevea brasiliensis; Intercropping; Mindanao; Mungbean; Philippines; Rice; Rubber plantations.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the US Agency for International Development through a grant to the IPM CRSP at Virginia Tech (Award No. EPP-A-00-04-00016-00), as part of a project funded for Southeast Asia to M Hammig, M Shepard, and G Carner of Clemson, by the Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station (Contribution No. 15-332-J), and by the University of Florida. Additional support was provided by the Asian Development Bank to the International Rice Research Institute through the Consortium for Unfavorable Rice Environments. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.