Impact of On-Farm Trials and Front-Line Demonstrations on Zero Tillage Maize in Peddapalli District, Telangana, India

Kiran Pilli *

Department of Soil Science, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Ramagirikhilla, Peddapalli District, Telangana, 505212, India.

Y. Venkanna

Department of Enomology, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Ramagirikhilla, Peddapalli District, Telangana, 505212, India.

B. Bhaskar Rao

Department of Horticulture, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Ramagirikhilla, Peddapalli District, Telangana, 505212, India.

A. Srinivas

Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Ramagirikhilla, Peddapalli District, Telangana, 505212, India.

T. Vinod Kumar

Department of Agriculture Extension, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Ramagirikhilla, Peddapalli District, Telangana, 505212, India.

B. Navya

Department of Home Science, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Ramagirikhilla, Peddapalli District, Telangana, 505212, India.

K. Archana

Department of Animal Husbandry, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Ramagirikhilla, Peddapalli District, Telangana, 505212, India.

B. Naresh

Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Ramagirikhilla, Peddapalli District, Telangana, 505212, India.

D. Vijaya

Sri Konda Laxman Telangana Horticultural University, Administrative Office, Mulugu, Siddipet District- 502279, Telangana, India.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

During Rabi season, a large portion of the Peddapalli district adopted rice fallow or cotton fallow maize cultivation with conventional method, which involves plow row sowing after two to three ploughings and is very expensive and time-consuming. Due to the late sowing, crop encounters to terminal moisture stress and needs extra irrigations, which decreases its yields and lowers its price in the district. The innovative idea of zero-tillage maize arose in 2012–13 as a countermeasure. Krishi Vigyan Kendra Ramagirikhilla carried out on farm trails and front-line demonstrations in various locations of Peddapalli district from 2012–13 to 2018–19. Total 52 farmers from various villages were chosen to demonstrate zero-tillage maize for seven years in a row. The results revealed that the maize yield (73.30 q ha-1) increased by 10.83 percent when compared to the farmers’ practice (66.26 q ha-1) with a technology index of 13.76%, an extension gap of 7.04 q ha-1, a technology gap of 11.70 q t ha-1 and recorded higher benefit-cost ratio (2.50) with additional income Rs. 16,460.37/- than farmers' practices (2.11). Compared to the farmers’ practice, zero tillage maize proved to be an effective technology for improving farmers’ income with lower cultivation costs due to its utilization of residual moisture, minimizes the number of irrigations and prevents the crop from terminal moisture stress. During the study the adoption of Zero tillage technology increased from negligible to 283.33% with overall adoption level 144.58% and horizontal spread from 0 ha up to 892 ha during 2018-19.

Keywords: Zero tillage, maize, on farm trials, front line demonstration, extension gap, technology gap, technology index, adoption level and horizontal spread


How to Cite

Pilli, Kiran, Y. Venkanna, B. Bhaskar Rao, A. Srinivas, T. Vinod Kumar, B. Navya, K. Archana, B. Naresh, and D. Vijaya. 2025. “Impact of On-Farm Trials and Front-Line Demonstrations on Zero Tillage Maize in Peddapalli District, Telangana, India”. Journal of Scientific Research and Reports 31 (4):251-59. https://doi.org/10.9734/jsrr/2025/v31i42946.

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