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New Indian Express
3 days ago
- Science
- New Indian Express
Rayalaseema region highly vulnerable to droughts, says report
VISAKHAPATNAM: A comprehensive study conducted by scientists from the Regional Agricultural Research Station, Acharya N G Ranga Agricultural University, has identified the most vulnerable districts in Andhra Pradesh for droughts and cyclones. The analysis is based on 22 years of data (2002–2024). Scientists P V Ramesh Babu, B Sahadeva Reddy, P Radhika, Ch Sreenivas, and T Srinivas presented the findings in a research paper titled 'Drought and Cyclone Vulnerability Districts of Andhra Pradesh' during the International Conference on Rainfed Agriculture hosted by ICAR-CRIDA in Hyderabad. The study reveals that the Rayalaseema region remains highly susceptible to drought. Ananthapur district ranked highest in terms of drought vulnerability with an index value of 1.0, indicating extreme sensitivity to rainfall deficits. Chittoor (0.96), Kadapa (0.71), Prakasam (0.70), and Kurnool (0.67) also fall into the high-vulnerability category. Of the 22 kharif seasons, Ananthapur, Chittoor, and Kadapa experienced drought in 17 years, while Kurnool reported 16 drought years and Prakasam 14. Other affected districts included Nellore (12 years), Vizianagaram (11 years), Srikakulam (10 years), and Guntur (10 years). Coastal districts such as Visakhapatnam (7 years) and the East and West Godavari districts (6 years each) reported comparatively fewer drought years during this period. Rabi season droughts were significantly fewer across the state. However, Ananthapur district still reported nine drought years during rabi seasons. Prakasam (5 years), Kadapa and Kurnool (3 years each) also faced notable drought occurrences.


Hans India
12-05-2025
- Health
- Hans India
HCC hosts crop diversification training programme
Lambasingi: A training programme on crop diversification was conducted at the Horticulture Collection Centre (HCC), Lambasingi, for farmers and officers of Alluri Sitharama Raju District. Organised under the mandatory capacity building initiative of the pilot project on Crop Diversification, funded by the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare through AICRP on Integrated Farming System, the event aimed to promote sustainable agriculture. Dr B Sahadeva Reddy, Principal Investigator explained the importance of shifting from monoculture to integrated farming systems for better resilience, soil health, and income. K Bala Karna, Horticulture Officer, Chinthapalli, emphasized cultivating alternative crops like floriculture, avocado, litchi, rambutan, medicinal plants, rajmash, and niger to curb Ganja cultivation. Dr. K Tejeswara Rao, Co-PI, spoke on value addition in farming. K Jahnavi, ADA, proposed the vote of thanks. Sixty-five Food Producer Organisation farmers attended. Farming expert, Mater trainer T Siva Kesava Rao discussed the role of medicinal plants in traditional healthcare.