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HILL AGRICULTURE AND SUSTAINABILITY

HILL AGRICULTURE AND SUSTAINABILITY
  • Country of Origin:

  • Imprint:

    NIPA

  • eISBN:

    9789361345197

  • Binding:

    EBook

  • Language:

    English

  • DOI:

    10.59317/9789361345197

Individual Price: 90.00 USD 81.00 USD

 
eBook is forthcoming!
 

The Indian hilly regions are home to 51 million individuals, accounting for 18% of the geographical area and 6% of the countrys population. Despite their significance, these regions are faced with developmental challenges and continuous pressure from both natural and human-induced stresses. However, the potential of these hills for economic growth, the development of the rural sector within the region, and their role in providing life-sustaining water and environmental services have attracted the attention of the government and other voluntary organizations. To promote sustainable development in these areas, it is crucial to maintain agro-biodiversity, adopt rainfed farming practices with major cropping systems such as maize-wheat, rice-wheat, and intercropped pulses and oilseeds in maize and wheat, and integrate livestock rearing as an integral part of mountain communities and nomadic tribes. Furthermore, technology, policy, and institutional interventions should be developed to address the specific needs of hill areas. Soil and moisture conservation technologies can be promoted by implementing water shed management, moisture conservation strategies, and water harvesting schemes. Additionally, the integration of cropping components with different farming system components can generate more income, increase profitability, and reduce dependence on external inputs. Horticulture components are one of the most promising enterprises in hill agriculture and can double farmers income while also creating employment opportunities and utilizing family labor throughout the year. The laborers engaged in crop components can also take care of dairy, poultry, apiary, and mushroom cultivation, reducing production costs and increasing profitability. Overall, the development of the hilly regions requires a comprehensive approach that addresses both economic and environmental concerns.
 

0 Start Pages

From the past most of the farming development efforts were made in the hills were based on the poor understanding of the hills, their resources, environment and the socio activities of the hill communities. Hill agriculture is dominant by inherent constraints, water scarcity, fragmented land holdings, poor input availability, loss of soil fertility and erosion. The present publication entitled ‘Hill Agriculture and Sustainable’ comprises of seven chapters. The first chapter is about description of several niche areas of hills that have comparative advantage for better exploitation of resources and for better trade. Second chapter is about dominant features of hill farming, third bares the problems in hill agriculture where as fourth ,fifth , sixth chapters indicates possible pathways through alternate farming, soil conservation, water conservation measures, whereas seventh chapter dealt with development of modules of integrated farming system for hills .

 
1 An Introduction to Hill Agriculture

Mountains play a vital role in sustaining about 10 per cent of the world population directly as they are the major source of water supply and majority of rivers originate from these ecosystems thus sustain the life of people residing in the plains. In India hill and mountainous areas are vastly distributed all over the country with the major mountain ranges in the Himalayas and the Western Ghats. The Himalayas are extending in 2500 km length and 250 to 400 km breadth (Khanday et al. 2004). They are further classified in three major categories i.e Western Himalayas (including Jammu and Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh), Central Himalayas (including eight hill districts of Uttarakhand), North Eastern Himalayas (including Sikkim, Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Tripura, Union Territory of Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, hill areas of Assam and Darjeeling district of West Bengal). Whereas Western Ghats also known as Sahyadri including border of Gujarat, Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu .

1 - 2 (2 Pages)
USD34.99
 
2 Characteristics of Hill Agriculture

Hilly areas of India, especially the Himalayas and the Nilgiris which are rich in their forests areas and watersheds have played a major role in maintaining climatic and ecological balance in the country for a long time. These hills and mountain areas have specific characteristics which differs them from plains in diversity of habitats for flora and fauna, ethnic diversity, topography, elevation, physiographic feature land use systems and socio-economic conditions. Agro-biodiversity The hills are characterized by rich agrobiodiversity. These rich agro-diversity elements have evolved, over the years due to association with the communities distributed along the mountain and hill slopes.

3 - 8 (6 Pages)
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3 Hill Agriculture and Constraints

Besides diversities and advantages in hills, the communities sustain largely on subsistence farming due to following constraints A.Natural constraints in hills There are large number of Inherent limitations in hill agriculture like, remote areas, vulnerability, marginality , eroded soil and short growing seasons. These Inherent constraints can be judged by the use of unsustainability indicators of hill agriculture which further showed increased in soil erosion rates from sloping farmlands , leaving of agricultural land due to decreasing soil fertility, appearance of stones and rocks on the cultivated lands, reduction in forest and grazing areas and more emphasis on monocropping that widened the cycle of inadequate food production and lead to food insecurity and increasing unemployment and frustration (Table 3) (Shrestha, 1992). These natural constraints are.

9 - 14 (6 Pages)
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4 Interventions to Sustain Hill Agriculture

As already discussed in above chapter there are various physical, geographical and environmental constraints that are associated with the hill agriculture, thus the scope for` agricultural policies based on modern input-intensive agriculture is inhibited in the hilly areas resulting in the majority of the hill communities to either live on subsistence agriculture or immigrating to other parts of the country for employment. The policies that might give successful results for any other state in India situated in the plains, may not prove to be fruitful in this hilly state. As the livelihood of the weaker sections in the hill areas is absolutely dependent on natural resources, their devastation will make the process of inclusive growth unsustainable in the long run. For sustainable agriculture it is necessary that agriculture of hill can be b understood in the right way and it should include all the necessary interventions on those activities in which farmers are dependent to make a livelihood. 

15 - 28 (14 Pages)
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5 Soil Conservation Measures

Soil conservation: it is using and managing land based on the capabilities of land itself, involving the application of the best practices to result in greatest profitable production without damaging the land Principles of soil conservation The aim of soil conservation is to obtain the maximum sustainable level of production from a given area of land whilst maintaining soil loss below a threshold level which theoretically, permits the natural rate of soil formation to keep pace with the rate of soil erosion. In addition, there may be a need to reduce erosion to control the loss of nutrients from agricultural land to prevent pollution of water bodies; to decrease rates of sedimentation in reservoirs, rivers, canals and ditches In the longer term, erosion has to be controlled to prevent land deteriorating in quality until it has to be abandoned and cannot be reclaimed, thereby limiting options for future landuse.

29 - 38 (10 Pages)
USD34.99
 
6 Moisture Conservation for Mitigating Livelihood Problems of Rainfed Areas

Introduction For sustainability hill agriculture water conservation issues are of great concern. Water is a generally limiting factor for crop production in hills and further water scarcity is arising at alarming rate due to climate change, declining soil productivity and inefficient management factors. Global warming is also putting the serious impact on the intensity, frequency and distribution of the rainfall. Further hill soils are ecologically fragile with undulated steep soils with low water retentive capacity where irrigation is not available. Moreover scope of supplying water by developing new water resources is limited thus under these conditions there is an urgent need for development of recent advanced agrotechniques to conserve and harvest natural water resources and protect the fragile environment of hills.

39 - 50 (12 Pages)
USD34.99
 
7 Farming System Approaches Towards Livelihood Improvement

Farm economic efficiency of a specific area is an important factor of productivity and growth, where resources are scare and opportunities for developing and adopting better technologies have lately declining. No doubt, conventional farming is risky and farmers are reluctant to invert heavily in crop production. Modest increments in productivity are no longer sufficient to justify the investment of scarce resources as farming sector is small scale and resource poor, but integrated farming system assumes greater importance for sound management of farm resources to enhance the farm productivity, reduce the environmental degradation, improve the quality of life of resource poor farmers and to maintained sustainability. Farming system refers to the farm wherein two or more enterprises are integrated with the farm resources for achieving the fuller utilization, realize maximum profit and stabilize returns.

49 - 60 (12 Pages)
USD34.99
 
8 End Pages

Ahmad 1984. Soil conservation needs in the hilly areas of Bangladesh.Task force report, resource loss and economic loss in the hill tract areas of Bangladesh. BARI, Report, Joydepur, Bangladesh Amareswari PU, Sujathamma P. Jeevamrutha as an alternative of chemical fertilizers in rice production. Agricultural Science Digest - A Research Journal. 2014;34(3):240. Anonymous.2010. Report of the evaluation study on hill area development programme in Assam and West Bengal organized by Planning Commission, Government of India. Azad,K.C.R Swarup and B.K.Sikka.1988.Horticultural development in hill areas, Mittal publications .Delhi Bajracharaya,B.B. 1992.Infrastructural development imperatives for sustainable Mountain Agriculture, In N.S. Jodha, M. Banskota and T. Partap(eds),Sustainable Mountain Agriculture ,vol.1 Oxford and IBH Publishing Co., pp.235-252. Behera, U.K., Jha, K.P. and Mahapatra, I.C. 2004. Integrated management of available resources of the small and marginal farmers for generation of income and employment in Eastern india.Crop Research 27(1):83-89

 
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