Table of contents |
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Introduction |
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Organic Farming |
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Permaculture |
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Integrated Farming System |
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Elements Required in Plant Growth |
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Weeds |
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Soil |
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Stages of Soil Erosion |
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Agriculture, pivotal for societal development, encompasses traditions, science, and policies ensuring food security, rural progress, and employment. Understanding agronomic practices, sustainable farming, and rural policies is crucial, fostering appreciation for its intricate role in socio-economic dynamics. Exploring agriculture reveals its complexities and transformative potential for sustainable development.
Organic farming is a production system encompassing various agricultural products like grains, meat, dairy, eggs, cotton, flowers, and processed foods, all produced organically. This approach deliberately avoids or significantly minimizes the use of synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, growth regulators, and livestock feed additives.
Components of Organic Farming
Organic farming relies on practices such as crop rotations, crop residues, animal manure, legumes, green manure, on/off-farm organic wastes, mechanical cultivation, mineral-bearing rocks, and biological control of pests and diseases. These methods are employed to maintain soil productivity, enhance tilth, and supply plant nutrients.
Scope of Organic Farming
Concepts in Organic Farming
Organic Farming Components
The key components include organic manures, non-chemical weed control, and biological pest and disease management.
Principles of Organic Farming
Eco-farming
Eco-farming involves mutually reinforcing ecological approaches to food production, aiming for the maintenance of soil in a manner consistent with natural processes. The guiding principle is "feed the soil, not the plant," emphasizing the importance of ecological balance in farming.
Comparison: Organic vs. Inorganic Fertilizers
Organic Fertilizers | Inorganic Fertilizers |
Improves soil texture, adds organic nitrogen, and stimulates beneficial bacteria and fungi. | Does not add humus to the soil, resulting in less ability to hold water and support living organisms. |
Improves water-holding capacity of soil. | Lowers oxygen content of the soil, affecting efficient fertilizer uptake. |
Helps prevent erosion. | Requires large amounts of energy to produce, transport, and apply, releasing greenhouse gases. |
Bill Mollison, an Australian ecologist, along with his student David Holmgren, introduced the term "permaculture" in 1978, derived from "permanent agriculture" or "permanent culture."
Permaculture is defined as a design system aimed at creating sustainable human environments, utilizing ecology as the foundation for integrated systems covering food production, housing, appropriate technology, and community development.
Characteristics
The integration of various farm enterprises, such as cropping systems, animal husbandry, fisheries, forestry, etc., aims at optimizing resource utilization and bringing prosperity to farmers. The choice and adoption of farming system components depend on factors like land availability, type of land, water resources, capital, farmer's technical skills, market facilities, etc.
Benefits of Integrated Farming System
1. Macronutrients:
2. Micronutrients:
Role of Manures
Classification of Organic Manures
Green Manuring
It involves ploughing green plants into the soil to enhance physical structure and fertility, e.g., Sannhemp, Dhaicha, Pillipesara, etc.
Bio-fertilizers
Preparations containing live or latent cells of microorganisms to increase nutrient availability, e.g., nitrogen-fixing Rhizobium, phosphate-solubilizing microorganisms, etc.
Integrated Nutrient Management (INM)
The judicious combination of organic, inorganic, and biofertilizers to replenish soil nutrients and sustain crop productivity.
Weeds are plants that are unwanted and interfere with land and water resources, negatively impacting crop production and human welfare. They exhibit gregarious behavior compared to crop plants.
Harmful effects of weeds
Beneficial effects of weeds
Genetically modified crops (GM crops)
These are plants whose DNA has been modified using genetic engineering techniques for agricultural purposes.
Watershed Management
A watershed is an area of land and water bounded by a drainage divide. Watershed management involves controlling surface runoff within this area to prevent soil erosion and maintain water resources.
Micro Irrigation
Micro irrigation is a method where a low volume of water is applied at low pressure and high frequency. It utilizes an extensive network of pipes and emitters for efficient water distribution.
Sprinkler Irrigation
In this method, water is sprayed into the air and falls on the ground surface, resembling natural rainfall. It is achieved through nozzles or orifices under pressure.
Drip Irrigation
Also known as trickle irrigation, it involves dripping water onto the soil at low rates through small-diameter plastic pipes fitted with emitters. Water is applied close to plants, wetting only the root zone.
Terracing
Terracing is the construction of embankments or ridges across a slope to control runoff, minimize soil erosion, and reduce the formation of gullies. It shortens the length of hillside slopes.
Soils cover Earth's land surface and play a crucial role in the ecosystem. Composed of minerals, organic materials, and open spaces, soils should ideally have about 45% minerals (sand, silt, clay), 5% organic matter, 25% air, and 25% water for optimal plant growth.
Factors influencing soil development
A mature soil profile, consisting of horizons labeled O, A, E, B, and C, reaches equilibrium over time. The composition of these horizons varies, and not all profiles contain all horizons.
Soil Components
Soil Texture and Structure
Soil texture refers to the relative proportion of sand, silt, and clay, while soil structure is the arrangement of particles in a soil mass.
Types of Soils
Processes of Soil Formation
Environmental Issues Related to Soil
Additional Information
Splash Erosion
Sheet Erosion
Rill Erosion
Gully Erosion
Ammonification
Ammonification is the production of ammonia resulting from the biological decomposition of organic nitrogen compounds.
Border Cropping
Border cropping involves growing crops on the border areas of a plot or field, for example, using safflower as a border crop in potato cultivation.
Border Strip Irrigation
Efficient irrigation method dividing the field into flooded strips, suitable for closely spaced crops.
Allelopathy
Allelopathy refers to the harmful effects of one plant on another through the exudation of toxic substances from roots or decomposed crop residues.
C:N Ratio
The C:N ratio represents the weight ratio of organic carbon to total nitrogen in the soil.
Check Basin
Check basin is an irrigation method using beds and channels to retain water, forming a pond.
Hard Pan
Hard pan is an impermeable layer in the soil profile, formed by the accumulation of materials like salts and clay, impeding drainage.
Growth Regulators
Growth regulators are organic substances, such as auxins and cytokinins, participating in the control of growth processes.
Heliophytes and Sciophytes
Heliophytes are sun-loving plants (e.g., Rice, Wheat), while sciophytes are shade-loving plants requiring less light intensity.
Heliotropism
Heliotropism is the movement of plant parts toward the sun, as seen in sunflowers.
Geotropism
Geotropism is a growth movement in response to gravity, like the groundnut peg's penetration into the soil.
Herbicide and Insecticide
Herbicides are chemicals used to kill or inhibit unwanted plants (e.g., Atrazine), while insecticides are chemicals for killing insects (e.g., Endosulfan).
Hidden Hunger
Hidden hunger occurs when plants show no visual deficiency symptoms but experience nutrient shortages, leading to yield losses.
Humus
Humus is a brown or black organic substance from partially or wholly decayed plant or animal matter, providing nutrients and enhancing soil water retention.
Mulching
Mulching involves covering the soil with materials like plant residues or plastic film to reduce evaporation, suppress weed growth, and maintain soil temperature.
Puddling
Puddling is a plowing operation conducted in waterlogged conditions to create an impervious layer beneath the plow pan.
Shifting Cultivation, Subsidiary Farming, and Subsistence Farming
Shifting cultivation involves clearing forest for temporary crop cultivation based on soil fertility. Subsidiary farming is settled farming in river banks in addition to gathering and hunting. Subsistence farming is growing crops only for family needs, not commercially.
Miyawaki Method for Creating Forests
The Miyawaki method, pioneered by Akira Miyawaki, builds dense native forests by planting dozens of native species in the same area. It ensures rapid plant growth and a dense plantation, becoming maintenance-free after the first three years.
System of Rice Intensification (SRI)
SRI, emerging in the 1980s, combines practices like changes in nursery management, transplanting timing, and water management to intensify rice production. It follows the principle of 'More with Less,' increasing yield with less water and reduced chemical inputs.
1. What is organic farming? | ![]() |
2. What is permaculture? | ![]() |
3. What is an integrated farming system? | ![]() |
4. What are the essential elements required for plant growth? | ![]() |
5. What is soil erosion and what are its stages? | ![]() |