Polyculture - alley, strip, cover, inter, mixed or three sister cropping systems
Polyculture is an
agricultural system were multiple crops are planted on the same piece of land
to provide crop diversity which mimic the diversity of natural ecosystems. This
does not only provide food, but sustain life as a whole. As opposed to raising
single crop/animal (monoculture), polyculture is raising more than one species
of plants or animals at the same time and place. Polyculture is an old system of farming which is still carried out in sub-Sahara Africa and has regained popularity today because of its environment
and health benefits. It is a sustainable form of agriculture because
of its ability to control pests, weed and diseases without major chemical
inputs. There are different types of polyculture systems such as intercropping,
cover-cropping and alley cropping. The type of polyculture carried out depends
on the types of plants grown, the spatial distribution and the time they spend
growing together. The type of plants or animals that can be raised in a
polyculture system has no limit.
Three sister crops (Maize, beans and pumpkin) |
Intercropping or mixed cropping – This occurs when two or more crops are planted together
e.g legumes and cereals mixtures. The legumes fix atmospheric nitrogen into the
soils at its root noddle in a process called nitrogen fixation. This soil
nitrogen acts as fertilizer for the other plants and therefore eliminates the
need for man-made fertilizers. A typical example is the ‘three sister crop’ system of planting maize, beans and squash (e.g
pumpkin) in a group to provide mutual benefits to each other. The maize
provides support for the beans to grow on, the beans provide nitrogen to
fertilize all the plants while the squash suppresses the weeds. These crops
thus sustain each other with little or no human intervention.
Strip or alley cropping |
Permaculture: - This is a polyculture of perennial plants such as
cocoa, coffee, timber, fruit trees etc. This system increases soil fertility,
decreases soil erosion, conserve soil nutrient and increase soil organism and water
retention. Agroforestry is a popular
form of permaculture where trees and crops are grown together. The trees
provide shade and organic nutrients when they share off their leaves and also
provide extra commodities like timber, medicine, firewood etc. Shade loving
crops like coffee and cocoa are well suited within such a system.
Advantages of polyculture
Pest and disease control: - Pest are less predominant in polyculture due to crop
diversity. Specialized pest that prefers a concentration of a single crop type often gets confused as they find it difficult to locate a favorable host in a polyculture. Common
general pest moves from one plant to another within a polyculture system to the
surrounding environment because they look alike, thereby reducing the effect on
a particular crop. This diversity of plants attracts natural enemies or
predators which help to further suppress pest population without causing harm
to the plants. Different plants are susceptible to different diseases so the
spread of diseases can be contained in polyculture.
Weed control: - the high density of plants reduces available space,
sunlight, water and nutrients for weed to develop as resources are fully utilized
by crops. The few that do grow can host arthropods (pest enemies) that are
beneficial to other crops.
Sustainability: -
A bunch of plantains at Suzy-Farms |
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