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Irrigated Rice Research Consortium
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Humans outsmarting rats in Vietnam
Farmers in An Giang, Vietnam, flood the burrows of rats, one of their traditional methods of rodent management. (An Giang sub-PPD photo) Vietnamese farmers in the provinces of Ha Nam and An Giang collectively practice control actions against rodents, one of the top three pests in the country. Community action and the use of the community trap barrier system are the key management strategies implemented in Vietnam and Indonesia by the project “Sustainable implementation of ecological rodent management.” This is funded by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research. The project’s objectives are related to the goals of the Irrigated Rice Research Consortium, particularly in disseminating mature lowland rice technologies. IRRC Coordinator Dr. Grant Singleton, a rodent expert, is the project leader at the International Rice Research Institute. Now in its second year, the project held a
review and planning workshop for Vietnam in Ha Nam Province on 19-20 April to
discuss the lessons learned from activities in 2006—what needs to be improved,
what went well, and what to do for 2007 and beyond. A few days before the
meeting, a training event on the biology of rats and ecologically based rodent
management (EBRM) was conducted by Dr. Peter Brown of the Australian
Commonwealth Dr. Peter Roebeling of CSIRO (project
coordinator) Results of the project’s first year of
implementation Scaling-up of project activities to the government and nongovernment organizations, and institutions in other districts, is the top priority for this year, with scaling-out to farmers set for the following year. Florencia Palis (f.palis@cgiar.org) |
More news 2007 Humans outsmarting rats in Vietnam International spotlight on rodent management—a marriage of basic and applied research 2006 Rat patrol in Nueva Ecija, Philippines Vietnam begins ecologically based rodent management Ecological rodent management workshop in Vietnam 2005 2003 |