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  2. Intercropping

Intercropping

  • Intercropping crops among trees

Description

Intercropping is the planting of crops in alternative rows in order to increase diversity, to enable the plants to help each other, to increase ground cover and typically to increase yields. Intercropping among trees can add to these benefits, as well as conserving trees. Intercropping enables the farmer to maximize connections between elements, increasing stability, diversity and total yield of a planting.

Implementation

Alley farming is an ecologically stabilizing process designed for tropical farmers to increase and sustain crop production. Rows of nutrient-rich trees form 5 meter alleys. If farmers regularly use prunings from these trees as mulch for crops grown in the alleys, the trees function as 'fertilizer bushes'. Farmers can defer fallow on fragile soils, extend and diversify cropping, and increase yields. As an innovation bundle, alley cropping supplies useful by-products: animal fodder, crop staking material, firewood, and mulch for erosion control and moisture retention.

The Konta Agro-Forestry Project in Sierra Leone aimed to replace slash-and-burn methods with the intercropping of food staples among trees. The acreage of food crops increased and eighty acres of degraded land wa planted with trees. Project membership, participating farmer incomes, and food supplies have increased.

In Java, kebun-talun (rotation system between mixed garden and tree plantation) is a traditional system that increases overall production and serves multiple functions by sequentially combining agricultural crops with tree crops. Pekarangan (homegarden intercropping system) is a traditional system located in the villages that provides both subsistence and commercial products and serves multiple functions by simultaneously combining agricultural crops with tree crops and animals.

Claim

On-farm research demonstrates that if the technical aspects of alley cropping outpace essential human components, the practice becomes dysfunctional, and the benefits farmers derive are negligible.

Broader

Narrower

Constrains

Facilitates

Facilitated by

Problem

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #2: Zero HungerSustainable Development Goal #15: Life on Land

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(D) Detailed strategies
Subject
  • Agriculture, fisheries » Crops
  • Plant life » Trees
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    May 20, 2022