‘BARI Masur-9’: An extra-early lentil cultivar for a rice-based cropping system in Bangladesh
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Date
2022-06-28
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ISI Journal
Impact factor: 0.902 (Year: 2022)
Citation
Md Shahin Uz Zaman, Md. Jahangir Alam, Md Golam Azam, Md Shahin Iqbal, Md. Ariful Islam, Debashish Sarkar, Md Aktar Uz Zaman, Md Shamsul Alam, Md Mahbubul Alam, Md Altaf Hossain, Md. Omar Ali, Debasish Sarker, Ashutosh Sarker. (28/6/2022). ‘BARI Masur-9’: An extra-early lentil cultivar for a rice-based cropping system in Bangladesh. Journal of Plant Registrations.
Abstract
Lentil (Lens culinaris Medik) is the third-most important grain legume in the world. In Bangladesh, it is important for human food and nutrition, animal feed, and sustainable rice-based cropping systems. However, lentil area is declining due to competition with other winter and spring crops, particularly irrigated spring rice (boro rice; Oryza sativa L.). To increase lentil production, the extra-early (<95 d) lentil line LRIL-22-70 was selected to grow in the short fallow period between monsoon and spring rice under a proposed new cropping pattern. LRIL-22-70 was identified from a recombinant inbred line population through rigorously evaluated in diverse agro-ecological conditions of Bangladesh and released for commercial cultivation by Pulses Research Centre, BARI, as ‘BARI Masur-9’ (Reg. no. CV-36, PI 700307) in 2018. BARI Masur-9 is a transgressive segregant for earliness (matures in <93 d) and fits well in the new monsoon rice–lentil–spring rice cropping pattern. It is a medium-seeded (2.38 g 100–1 seed) cultivar with high tolerance to Stemphylium blight. The average seed yield of BARI Masur-9 was 1,201 kg ha–1, with higher concentrations of Fe (73 mg kg−1) and Zn (61 mg kg−1) compared with other genotypes; thus, BARI Masur-9 contributes to combatting micronutrient malnutrition in Bangladesh. BARI Masur-9, the first extra-early lentil cultivar, can successfully be grown to replace fallow between rice as a new cropping pattern monsoon rice–lentil (BARI Masur-9)–spring rice in about 8 million ha in Bangladesh, eastern Indian states, and eastern Nepal.
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Sarker, Ashutosh https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9074-4876