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  • ICAR and TNAU E-Course Summarized

    Summarized Notes
  • Which region has the practice of shifting cultivation in India?

    Question: Which region has the practice of shifting cultivation in India?

    Options:

    North-eastern region
    Southern region
    North-western region
    South-eastern region

    🔑 Key Points
    Concept:
    → Every region follows different agricultural practices.
    → Depending on the type of crop and scale of farming, various agricultural practices are adopted.

    🌿 About Shifting Cultivation:
    → It is a type of subsistence farming where the farmer cultivates on a plot of land temporarily, and when the land becomes infertile due to soil exhaustion, they move on to another plot.
    → Largely practised in the north-eastern region of India, including Assam, Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland, etc.
    → Known as "Jhum Kheti" or Slash and burn agriculture.
    → Forest land is cleaned and ashes are added to the soil.
    → Cultivated spots/areas are usually small, with short periods of crop occupation alternating with long fallow periods.
    → Field rotation is practised instead of crop rotation.
    → Farmers move on to a new plot when the previous land becomes infertile due to soil exhaustion.

    📌 Important Points:
    → Shifting cultivation in India:

    Jhoom: North-eastern India
    Vevar and Dahiyaar: Madhya Pradesh
    Deepa: Madhya Pradesh
    Zara and Erka: Southern States
    Batra: South-eastern Rajasthan
    Podu: Andhra Pradesh
    Kumari: Western Ghats of Kerala
    Kaman: Odisha
    → Shifting cultivation in the world:

    Lading: South-east Asia
    Milpa: Central America
    Chitemene or Tavy: Africa
    Chena: Sri Lanka
    📝 Additional Information:
    → The practice of shifting cultivation is also known as "fire-fallow cultivation."

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