Plot: An area of land where crops are grown. It can
vary in sixe, shape or borders
Soil: The subtance on the surface of the Earth in which
plants grow, produced mainly by the weathering of rock.
Crop rotation: The practice of growing different types of
crops in the same area in sequential seasons. This method improves sil
fertility and resistance to disease and pests
Intensive
agriculture: is an agricultural
production system characterized by a low fallow ratio and the high use of
inputs such as capital, labour, or heavy use of pesticides and chemical
fertilizers relative to land area.
Extensive
agriculture: An agricultural system
that uses small inputs of labour, fertilisers, and capital, relative to the area
of land that is being farmed.
Dryland farming: Farming in which the fields receive only
rainwater.
Irrigated farming: Farming in which the water from groundwater,
reservoirs or rivers is brought to fields.
Polyculture: is agriculture using multiple crops in the same space,
in imitation of the diversity of natural ecosystems, and avoiding large stands
of single crops, or monoculture. It includes multi-cropping, intercropping,
companion planting, beneficial weeds, and alley cropping.
Monoculture: is the agricultural practice of producing or
growing a single crop or plant species over a wide area and for a large number
of consecutive years
Greenhouses: is a building in which plants are grown
Subsistence
agriculture: A type of agriculture in which
farmers only grow enough food to feed themselves and their families.
Shifting
cultivation: is an agricultural
system in which plots of land are cultivated temporarily, then abandoned and
allowed to revert to their natural vegetation while the cultivator moves on to
another plot
Livestock farming: Farming bassed on rearing animals to obtain products.
Housed livestock: Livestock fed with fodder in farm buildings.
This type of livestock must pass strict sanitary and quality controls
Cattle: are the most common type of large domesticated
ungulates.
Fodder: is any agricultural foodstuff used specifically
to feed domesticated livestock, such as cattle, goats, sheep, horses, chickens
and pigs.
Rear: To care for, breed and grow animals until maturity.
Fishing grounds: An area of water that is used for fishing.
Aquaculture: is the farming of aquatic organisms such as fish,
crustaceans, molluscs and aquatic plants.
Overfishing: is a form of overexploitation in which fish stocks are
depleted to unacceptable levels, regardless of water body size.
Fleets: is an aggregate of commercial fishing vessels
School of fish: many fishes together
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