Multiple croping why it possible
Answers
Answered by
1
1. In agriculture, multiple cropping is the practice of growing two or more crops in the same piece of land during a single growing season. It is a form of polyculture.
2. It does this by balancing three key ecological processes: competition, on the one hand, and commensalism (one plant gaining benefits from the other) or mutualism (both plants benefitting each other) on the other.
3. Typically, farmers will plant crops as close together as possible to utilise all the available land.
4. When different crop species or varieties are grown together, the competition may be fierce; trees grown in a maize field, for example, may shade out the crop.
5. This can be compensated for by determining the optimal spacing and by exploiting various forms of commensalism or mutualism, for example where the tree may be a legume, providing nitrogen for the crop plant beneath.
Hope this helps !
Good luck !
2. It does this by balancing three key ecological processes: competition, on the one hand, and commensalism (one plant gaining benefits from the other) or mutualism (both plants benefitting each other) on the other.
3. Typically, farmers will plant crops as close together as possible to utilise all the available land.
4. When different crop species or varieties are grown together, the competition may be fierce; trees grown in a maize field, for example, may shade out the crop.
5. This can be compensated for by determining the optimal spacing and by exploiting various forms of commensalism or mutualism, for example where the tree may be a legume, providing nitrogen for the crop plant beneath.
Hope this helps !
Good luck !
Answered by
0
Answer:
Explanation:the importance of growing more than one crop on a piece of land is that:
1. Retains soil fertility
2. Uses the same area for more crop production
3. Benefits farmer economically
4. Farmer's increased earning enables arranging working capital for the next year easier
5. Generates employment for many people throughout the year.
Similar questions