BSS, Rajshahi :
Prospect of intercropping mulberry trees with some other vegetables and spices is very bright to boost additional income from the same land together with silk cocoon production throughout the country, said the scientists and researchers.
They said some vegetables, spices and crops including black gram and wheat could easily be produced in between the spaces of mulberry rows for maximum utilization of the land resources.
Professor Dr Sawdagor Mahfuzur Rahman of Zoology Department of Rajshahi University told BSS that the prospect has been increased with extension of mulberry cultivation on around 8,000 hectares of land including roadside plantation throughout the country for the last couple of years.
Actually, the mulberry is cultivated for silkworm rearing and production of silk cocoon.
He said domestic silk could not compete with the imported silk in terms of price and quality and domestic silk has gradually losing its market since 1995.
Subsequently, the traditional silk industry had been incurring loss and the affected mulberry farmers forcing them to shift their ancestral mulberry farming to other seasonal crops.
The mulberry cultivation is more or less dependent on the fallow lands and other roadside mulberry plants without proper management practice at present.
Taking the unexpected situation into consideration, Bangladesh Sericulture Research and Training Institute (BSRTI) has carried out some research works titled ‘technology transfer for intercropping with mulberry cultivation’ with some seasonal vegetables and spices like palangshak, lalshak, onion and arum to get additional income from the same land to encourage the cultivators for re-plantation of mulberry plants.