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similarly land-intensive form of subsistence agriculture
(Figure 14.4). Nomadic herders must continually move
their livestock to find adequate food for the animals.
Intercropping is a form of intensive subsistence agri-
culture that involves growing a variety of plants on the
same field simultaneously. When certain crops are grown
together, they produce higher yields than when they are
grown as monocultures. (A monoculture is the cultiva-
tion of only one type of plant over a large area.) One rea-
son for higher yields is that different pests are found on
each crop, and intercropping discourages the buildup of
any single pest species to economically destructive levels.
Polyculture is a type of intercropping in which several
kinds of plants that mature at different times are planted
together. In polyculture practiced in the tropics, fast- and
slow-maturing crops are often planted together so that
different crops can be harvested throughout the year.
- What are some differences between industrialized
agriculture and subsistence agriculture? - What are shifting cultivation, nomadic herding,
and intercropping?
Most farmers in developing
countries practice subsistence
agriculture, the production of
enough food to feed oneself and
one’s family, with little left over to
sell or reserve for hard times. Sub-
sistence agriculture also requires
large inputs of energy, but from
humans and draft animals rather
than from fossil fuels.
Some types of subsistence agriculture require large
tracts of land. Shifting cultivation is a form of subsistence
agriculture in which short periods of cultivation are followed
by longer periods of fallow (land being left uncultivated),
during which the land reverts to forest. Shifting cultivation
supports relatively small populations. Slash-and-burn agri-
culture is a type of shifting cultivation that involves clearing
small patches of tropical forest to plant crops (see Chapter
13). Slash-and-burn agriculture is land-intensive; because
tropical soils lose their productivity quickly when they are
cultivated, farmers using slash-and-burn agriculture must
move from one area of forest to another every 3 years or so.
Nomadic herding, in which livestock is supported
by land too arid for successful crop growth, is a
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subsistence
agriculture
Traditional agricultural
methods that are
dependent on labor
and a large amount
of land to produce
enough food to feed
oneself and one’s
family.
354 CHAPTER 14 Agriculture and Food Resources