Subtopic Deep Dive

Adoption Barriers in Rice-Fish Farming
Research Guide

What is Adoption Barriers in Rice-Fish Farming?

Adoption barriers in rice-fish farming refer to socioeconomic, technical, environmental, and institutional constraints preventing smallholder farmers from integrating fish culture with rice production in flooded paddies.

Research identifies knowledge gaps, market access limitations, salinity intrusion, and policy shortcomings as primary hurdles (Ahmed et al., 2011; Alam et al., 2017). Studies from Bangladesh, Vietnam, and India document low uptake despite proven productivity gains from rice-fish systems (Berg et al., 2016; Goswami et al., 2014). Over 20 papers since 1996 analyze these barriers, with foundational works citing farmer typology and extension needs.

15
Curated Papers
3
Key Challenges

Why It Matters

Overcoming adoption barriers enables wider dissemination of rice-fish systems, boosting income and food security for smallholders in Asia (Ahmed et al., 2011; Berg et al., 2016). In Bangladesh, socioeconomic constraints limit efficiency despite high potential yields (Ahmed et al., 2011). In Vietnam's Mekong Delta, recognizing wetland services in rice-fish integration counters environmental degradation from monoculture (Berg et al., 2016). Farmer typologies inform targeted interventions in complex agro-ecosystems (Goswami et al., 2014; Shukla et al., 2019). Salinity impacts on fish viability highlight coastal vulnerabilities (Alam et al., 2017).

Key Research Challenges

Socioeconomic Constraints

Smallholders face high initial costs, limited market access, and credit shortages for rice-fish adoption (Ahmed et al., 2011). Studies in Bangladesh show these factors reduce production efficiency despite opportunities (Ahmed et al., 2011). Farm typologies reveal economic disparities across coastal regions (Goswami et al., 2014).

Technical Knowledge Gaps

Farmers lack training on floodwater management and fish-rice compatibility (Roger, 1996). Integrated systems require specific agronomic practices often unknown to monoculture growers (Chapagain and Raizada, 2017). Extension interventions must address these gaps for terrace and paddy contexts (Goswami et al., 2014).

Environmental and Policy Barriers

Salinity intrusion harms fish species in coastal belts, deterring adoption (Alam et al., 2017). Policy frameworks fail to incentivize diversification beyond rice monoculture (Swastika et al., 2004). Wetland ecosystem services remain underrecognized in rice-fish promotion (Berg et al., 2016).

Essential Papers

1.

The impact of the Green Revolution on indigenous crops of India

Ann Raeboline Lincy Eliazer Nelson, Kavitha Ravichandran, Usha Antony · 2019 · Journal of Ethnic Foods · 343 citations

Abstract The Green Revolution in India was initiated in the 1960s by introducing high-yielding varieties of rice and wheat to increase food production in order to alleviate hunger and poverty. Post...

2.

Effect of Salinity Intrusion on Food Crops, Livestock, and Fish Species at Kalapara Coastal Belt in Bangladesh

Mohammad Zahangeer Alam, Lynne Carpenter‐Boggs, Shishir Mitra et al. · 2017 · Journal of Food Quality · 144 citations

Salinity has caused significant negative effects on agricultural production. This research is focused on the vulnerabilities of soil and water salinities on crop, fish, and livestock production acr...

3.

Farmer typology to understand differentiated climate change adaptation in Himalaya

Roopam Shukla, Ankit Agarwal, Christoph Gornott et al. · 2019 · Scientific Reports · 120 citations

Abstract Smallholder farmers’ responses to the climate-induced agricultural changes are not uniform but rather diverse, as response adaptation strategies are embedded in the heterogonous agronomic,...

4.

Recognizing wetland ecosystem services for sustainable rice farming in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam

Håkan Berg, Agnes Ekman Söderholm, Anna-Sara Söderström et al. · 2016 · Sustainability Science · 116 citations

The increased rice production in the Mekong Delta during the last two decades has improved agricultural income and reduced poverty, but it has also had negative impacts on the environment and human...

5.

Feed Resources for Animals in Asia: Issues, Strategies for Use, Intensification and Integration for Increased Productivity

C. Devendra, R. A. Leng · 2011 · Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences · 116 citations

The availability and efficient use of the feed resources in Asia are the primary drivers of performance to maximise productivity from animals.Feed security is fundamental to the management, extent ...

6.

Biology and management of the floodwater ecosystem in ricefields

P. A. Roger · 1996 · Repositorio Institucional · 112 citations

From Foreword: "In this book, the author focuses on management practices that maintain soil fertility, preserve or even improve the floodwater environment, and provide opportunities for diversifyin...

7.

Agronomic Challenges and Opportunities for Smallholder Terrace Agriculture in Developing Countries

Tejendra Chapagain, Manish N. Raizada · 2017 · Frontiers in Plant Science · 105 citations

Improving land productivity is essential to meet increasing food and forage demands in hillside and mountain communities. Tens of millions of smallholder terrace farmers in Asia, Africa, and Latin ...

Reading Guide

Foundational Papers

Start with Ahmed et al. (2011) for socioeconomic barriers in Bangladesh, Roger (1996) for floodwater ecosystem basics, and Devendra and Leng (2011) for feed integration strategies, as they establish core constraints and opportunities.

Recent Advances

Study Berg et al. (2016) on Mekong wetland services, Shukla et al. (2019) on farmer typologies, and Alam et al. (2017) on salinity effects for current adoption challenges.

Core Methods

Farmer surveys, typological classification (Shukla et al., 2019; Goswami et al., 2014), efficiency modeling (Ahmed et al., 2011), and salinity impact assessments (Alam et al., 2017) form core techniques.

How PapersFlow Helps You Research Adoption Barriers in Rice-Fish Farming

Discover & Search

Research Agent uses searchPapers and exaSearch to find adoption barrier studies like 'Socioeconomic aspects of rice‐fish farming in Bangladesh' by Ahmed et al. (2011). citationGraph reveals connections from Roger (1996) floodwater management to Berg et al. (2016) Mekong Delta applications. findSimilarPapers expands from Alam et al. (2017) salinity effects to related coastal constraints.

Analyze & Verify

Analysis Agent applies readPaperContent to extract barrier metrics from Ahmed et al. (2011), then verifyResponse with CoVe checks claims against Goswami et al. (2014) typologies. runPythonAnalysis processes yield data from rice-fish systems using pandas for statistical comparisons. GRADE grading evaluates evidence strength on socioeconomic impacts.

Synthesize & Write

Synthesis Agent detects gaps in policy incentives across Ahmed et al. (2011) and Swastika et al. (2004), flagging contradictions in salinity tolerance. Writing Agent uses latexEditText and latexSyncCitations to draft extension model papers, with latexCompile for publication-ready outputs. exportMermaid visualizes farmer adoption flowcharts from typologies.

Use Cases

"Analyze yield impacts of salinity on rice-fish systems in coastal Bangladesh"

Research Agent → searchPapers + exaSearch → Analysis Agent → readPaperContent (Alam et al., 2017) → runPythonAnalysis (pandas salinity-yield regression) → statistical summary table with p-values.

"Write a LaTeX review on rice-fish adoption barriers citing Ahmed 2011 and Berg 2016"

Synthesis Agent → gap detection → Writing Agent → latexEditText + latexSyncCitations + latexCompile → formatted PDF review with integrated bibliography.

"Find code for modeling rice-fish farmer adoption typologies"

Research Agent → paperExtractUrls (Shukla et al., 2019) → Code Discovery → paperFindGithubRepo → githubRepoInspect → Python scripts for cluster analysis of farmer types.

Automated Workflows

Deep Research workflow conducts systematic review of 50+ papers on rice-fish barriers: searchPapers → citationGraph → DeepScan 7-step analysis with GRADE checkpoints on Ahmed et al. (2011). Theorizer generates extension incentive models from Roger (1996) and Goswami et al. (2014) data. DeepScan verifies salinity constraint claims across Alam et al. (2017) and Berg et al. (2016).

Frequently Asked Questions

What defines adoption barriers in rice-fish farming?

Socioeconomic, technical, environmental, and policy constraints block smallholder integration of fish with rice paddies (Ahmed et al., 2011).

What are main methods to study these barriers?

Farmer typologies, production efficiency analysis, and farm classification surveys identify constraints (Shukla et al., 2019; Goswami et al., 2014; Ahmed et al., 2011).

What are key papers on rice-fish adoption?

Ahmed et al. (2011, 84 citations) covers Bangladesh challenges; Roger (1996, 112 citations) details floodwater management; Berg et al. (2016, 116 citations) analyzes Mekong Delta services.

What open problems persist?

Scalable extension models for salinity-prone areas and policy incentives for diversification remain unresolved (Alam et al., 2017; Swastika et al., 2004).

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