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crop rotation |
Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
crop rotationSuccessive cultivation of different crops in a specified order on the same fields. Some rotations are designed for high immediate returns, with little regard for basic resources. Others are planned for high continuing returns while protecting resources. A typical scheme selects rotation crops from three classifications: cultivated row crops (e.g., corn, potatoes), close-growing grains (e.g., oats, wheat), and sod-forming, or rest, crops (e.g., clover, clover-timothy). In general, cropping systems should include deep-rooting legumes. In addition to the many beneficial effects on soils and crops, well-planned crop rotations make the farm a more effective year-round enterprise by providing more efficient handling of labour, power, and equipment, reduction in weather and market risks, and improved ability to meet livestock requirements. |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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By 1750, the Kleists had abandoned the three-field system, placing their manorial farms on an improved crop rotation system that resulted in better yields and increased dairy production. Heinzen points to three concerns that produced this turn: the specialists' desire for improved working conditions, their hope to enhance their own professional status, and their vision of a modern countryside freed from the three-field system, frequent land partitions, and strip farming. |
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