Good rains in Karnataka so far have boosted prospects of sowing of summer crops in the state, with area under pulses increasing by 42 per cent to 5.15 lakh hectares so far in the 2016-17 kharif season.
Not only pulses, area sown to paddy, coarse cereals, oil seeds and sugarcane so far remained much higher than in the same period of the 2015-16 kharif season.
Sowing of kharif (summer) crops begins with the onset of the South-West monsoon from June. Harvesting starts from October.
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Tur area has risen to 2.34 lakh hectares from the earlier 0.74 lakh hectares and moong's has gone up to 1.96 lakh hectares from 1.66 lakh hectares while urad's has edged up to 0.43 lakh hectares from 0.42 lakh hectares in the said period.
"Good rains in the state and announcement of higher support price are encouraging farmers to grow pulses this time. There has been a shift in area to pulses," a senior ministry official said.
Among other crops, paddy -- the main kharif crop -- has been sown in 1.01 lakh hectares as on today of this kharif season as against 0.99 lakh hectares a year earlier.
Coarse cereals area has risen to 5.48 lakh hectares from the earlier 3.17 lakh hectares while that of oil seeds jumped to 3.38 lakh hectares from 2.45 lakh hectares in the said period.
Among cash crops, sugarcane has been planted in 2.84 lakh hectares so far this season, slightly higher than 2.68 lakh hectares in the year-ago period.
However, cotton area was down at 0.82 lakh hectares so far as against 2.08 lakh hectares in the same period last kharif season, the data showed.