Tag: plantation of crops

Questions Related to plantation of crops

A single crop grown on a large area and using intensive capital inputs are some of the major features of __________ type of agriculture.

  1. Intensive subsistence farming

  2. Commercial

  3. Primitive subsistence farming

  4. Plantation


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

The plantation has an interface of agriculture and industry. Plantations cover large tracts of land, using capital intensive inputs, with the help of migrant labourers. All the produce is used as raw material in respective industries. In India, tea, coffee, rubber, sugarcane, banana, etc.. are important plantation crops. 

The growing of grasses in between rows of crops is known as ___________.

  1. strip cropping

  2. row cropping

  3. line cropping

  4. sequence cropping


Correct Option: A
Explanation:
  • Crops are grown in alternate strips of land to check the impact of the winds.
  • It is used when a slope is too steep or when there is no alternative method of preventing soil erosion.
  • Strip cropping helps to stop soil erosion by creating natural dams for water, helping to preserve the strength of the soil.

Which one out of the following is a 'Kharif crop'?

  1. Maize

  2. Wheat

  3. Gram

  4. Mustard


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Kharif crops are grown with the onset of monsoon in different parts of the country and these are harvested in September-October. Important crops grown during this season are paddy, maize, jowar, bajra, tur (arhar), moong, urad, cotton, jute, groundnut and soyabean. 

The north-eastern and central India have been deforested due to ________.

  1. Mixed cultivation

  2. Shifting cultivation

  3. Terrace farming

  4. Intensive farming


Correct Option: B
Explanation:
Shifting cultivation
Shifting cultivation is an agricultural system in which areas of land are cultivated for a short time. Then they are left to grow back their natural vegetation, while the farmer moves to another area. Shiting cultivation is particularly practiced on a large scale in north-eastern and central India.
However, the greatest damage inflicted on Indian forests was during the colonial period due to the expansion of the railways, agriculture, commercial and scientific forestry, and mining activities. Even after Independence, agricultural expansion continues to be one of the major causes of the depletion of forest resources. 

In which of the following states of India is intensive subsistence farming largely practiced?

  1. Rajasthan

  2. Gujarat

  3. West Bengal

  4. Punjab


Correct Option: C
Explanation:
  • This type of farming is practiced in areas of high population pressure on land. It is labour intensive farming, where high doses of biochemical inputs and irrigation are used for obtaining higher production. 
  • In India, the farmers of West Bengal, Kerala, the coastal Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu provide a good example of intensive subsistence wet paddy agriculture .

'Mixed farming' refers to __________.

  1. Growing rabi crops and cash crops

  2. Growing food and non-food crops

  3. Growing more than one crop in the same field

  4. Growing kharifand cash crops


Correct Option: C
Explanation:
In mixed farming the land is used for growing food and fodder crops and rearing livestock. Two or more crops are grown together. 

When a farmer produces just enough to sustain his family, it is called _________.

  1. Subsistence agriculture

  2. Commercial agriculture

  3. Pastoral farming

  4. Truck farming


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Subsistence farming is characterised by small and scattered land holdings and the use of primitive tools, like a hoe and digging sticks by family members. As the farmers are poor, they do not use fertilisers or (HYV) seeds in their fields. Most of the food production is consumed by the farmers and their families.

Subsistence farming is practised to meet the needs of _____ family.

  1. Contractor's

  2. Jagirdar's

  3. Owner's

  4. Farmers


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

Majority of farmers in India practice subsistence farming. It is characterised by small and scattered landholdings and use of primitive tools, like hoe and digging sticks by family members. As the farmers are poor, they do not use fertilisers or (HYV) seeds in their fields. Most of the food production is consumed by the farmers and their families.

Which one of the following has the highest area under jhuming (shifting cultivation)?

  1. Maharashtra

  2. Kerala

  3. Nagaland

  4. Punjab


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

Nagaland.
Jhum or jhoom cultivation is also called as shifting cultivation or cultivation or slash and burn cultivation.This type of cultivation is mainly practised in much of the world's Humid Low-Latitude, or climate regions, which have relatively high temperatures and abundant rainfall.Shifting cultivation is practiced by nearly 250 million people, especially in the tropical rain forests of South America, Central and West Africa, and Southeast Asia. In India, it is practised by the hill tribes of Northeastern hill region like in the states of Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland,Tripura, Arunachal pradesh and Mizoram and also in the states of Sikkim, Bihar, Orissa, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka and Maharashtra. In Andhrapradesh it is practiced in the districts of Srikakulam, Vizianagaram, Visakhapatnam, Khammam , East and West Godavari districts and sparsely in Adilabad disrtict. In all these regions , jhum cultivations is known by vernacular names.

Consider the following statements and select the correct answer using the code given below:
1. 'Enrichment plantation' was introduced by the British in India.
2. 'Enrichment Plantation' makes biodiversity sustainable.

  1. Only 1 is correct

  2. Only 2 is correct

  3. Both 1 and 2 are correct

  4. Neither 1 nor 2 is correct


Correct Option: A
Explanation:
The British Government appointed German expert Dietrich Brand as the first Inspector General of Forest. He recommended the formation of rules and regulations of Forest Management and helped formulate the Indian forest Act, 1865. Scientific forestry was introduced when the forests were cleared for plantation.