Could bamboo-based agroforestry systems be the latest kind of climate smart agriculture?
- From
-
Published on
18.05.20
- Impact Area

Bamboo is not just this new hipster material used for producing alternative clothes. Bamboo can be used in agroforestry systems by farmers in subtropical, semi-arid regions of the world to create sources of income, reclaim degraded land and fight the climate crisis.
Those are the findings of a recent study, published in the journal, Agroforestry Systems, this April, entitled Bamboo-based agroforestry system (Dendrocalamus strictus + sesame–chickpea) for enhancing productivity in semi-arid tropics of central India.
Related news
-
ICRISAT to Deliver World-Class Services as CGIAR’s Breeding Resources South Asia Hub
International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT)07.07.25-
Biodiversity
-
Food security
Strategic collaboration to scale innovation and deliver harmonized, high-quality support across CGIA…
Read more -
-
Multifunctional Landscapes that reconcile food production, with ecosystem restoration and biodiversity conservation
Multifunctional Landscapes Science Program06.07.25-
Biodiversity
-
Environmental health & biodiversity
The CGIAR Multifunctional Landscapes Science Program (MFL SP) is driven by a bold vision of…
Read more -
-
PABRA and Rwanda’s Agriculture Ministry chart new path for bean value chain transformation at ACAT Conference
The Alliance of Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT)30.06.25-
Nutrition, health & food security
-
Poverty reduction, livelihoods & jobs
As Rwanda continues efforts towards eradicating malnutrition, the bean crop continues to be a symbol…
Read more -