| Literature DB >> 28367150 |
Tejendra Chapagain1, Manish N Raizada1.
Abstract
Improving land productivity is essential to meet increasing food and forage demands in hillside and mountain communities. Tens of millions of smallholder terrace farmers in Asia, Africa, and Latin America who earn $1-2 per day do not have access to peer-reviewed knowledge of best agronomic practices, though they have considerable traditional ecological knowledge. Terrace farmers also lack access to affordable farm tools and inputs required to increase crop yields. The objectives of this review are to highlight the agronomic challenges of terrace farming, and offer innovative, low-cost solutions to intensify terrace agriculture while improving local livelihoods. The article focuses on smallholder farmers in developing nations, with particular reference to Nepal. The challenges of terrace agriculture in these regions include lack of quality land area for agriculture, erosion and loss of soil fertility, low yield, poor access to agricultural inputs and services, lack of mechanization, labor shortages, poverty, and illiteracy. Agronomic strategies that could help address these concerns include intensification of terraces using agro-ecological approaches along with introduction of light-weight, low-cost, and purchasable tools and affordable inputs that enhance productivity and reduce female drudgery. To package, deliver, and share these technologies with remote hillside communities, effective scaling up models are required. One opportunity to enable distribution of these products could be to "piggy-back" onto pre-existing snackfood/cigarette/alcohol distribution networks that are prevalent even in the most remote mountainous regions of the world. Such strategies, practices, and tools could be supported by formalized government policies dedicated to the well-being of terrace farmers and ecosystems, to maintain resiliency at a time of alarming climate change. We hope this review will inform governments, non-governmental organizations, and the private sector to draw attention to this neglected and vulnerable agro-ecosystem in developing countries.Entities:
Keywords: Nepal; agronomy; conuco; erosion; legume; mechanization; terrace agriculture; wall crop
Year: 2017 PMID: 28367150 PMCID: PMC5355443 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.00331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Locally made tools used in terrace farming in the hills and mountains of South Asia (Images courtesy of Lisa Smith, University of Guelph, can be re-used under the Creative Commons BY license).
| Plogh | Ploghing tool made of wood, iron, or steel frame with an attached blade or stick used to cut the earth | Animate (Animal and Human) | |
| Spade, Kodali | Digging tools made of wood (handle) and a wide sharp tip of metal; a shovel differs from a spade in the form and thickness of the blade | Human | |
| Leveler | The plank of the leveler is made of wood, and the shafts made of bamboo, to level the field after ploghing | Animate (Animal and Human) | |
| Hammer | The wooden hammer used to break the leftover clods after leveling | Human | |
| Rake | Rake is made of wood (handle), and the metal hard tines used to spread around mulch, dirt, or rocks | Human | |
| Hand cultivator | Weeding/soil loosening tool for small areas | Human | |
| Trowel | Digging tool to make small holes to plant seedling, normally used for transplanting | Human | |
| Shovel | Tool to move material from a pie as a scoop, not for digging | Human | |
| Sickle, Hansiya, Karaunti | Cutting/harvesting tools made of wood (handle) and un/serrated curved blade | Human | |
| Winnower | Semi/circle structures made of bamboo to separate the grains from husk | Human | |
| Sieve | Bamboo made tools to separate grains and align materials/dirt | Human | |
| Bamboo Basket | Big bamboo basket ( | Human | |
| Hand mill | The base (grinder) is made of rock with a wooden/bamboo handle used to grind flour and pulses | Human | |
| Sac | Made of jute or plastic, used to store the cleaned/processed farm produce | – | |
Low-cost and sustainable practices and tools for terrace farms (Source: SAKNepal, .
| 1. | Planting wall crops (trailing or climbing types) on vertical slopes | Utilizes unused slopes; ground cover protects soils; improved economic returns. |
| 2. | Planting legumes (hanging or bush type) on terrace edges | Protects edge-collapse; reduces surface runoff; additional yield and biomass from edge crops. |
| 3. | Living grass (napier, vetch, lucerne) barriers | Reduces surface runoff; protects soil from water erosion. |
| 4. | Use of cover crops/dry season legume forages | Protects soil during rainy season and conserves moisture during the dry season; mitigates dry season outmigration. |
| 5. | Micro-climate based diversification | Utilization of niche based micro-climatic pockets provides tremendous opportunities to grow diverse crops of economic value. |
| 6. | Contour ridging | Formation of ridges perpendicular to the slope; prevents runoff; crops are planted on the ridges as well as in the furrows. |
| 7. | Tied ridging | Formation of repeated small earthen ties between the ridges on which crops are planted; accommodates runoff, preventing water erosion. |
| 8. | Mulch ripping | Parallel rips into the soil along with maintaining crop residues/straw mulch (e.g., maize stover) or cover crops on hillsides catches/prevent surface runoff. |
| 9. | Raising crops in a | |
| 10. | Inverse sloping | Cultivation on terraces (and/or wall base) that are sloped toward the upper wall, not the edge, to promote more efficient capture of moisture and nutrients. |
| 11. | Eco-tourism | Increases the number of tourists and income from tourism. |
| 1. | Intercropping (e.g., maize + cowpea, maize + ginger, ginger + soybean, millet + soybean, mustard + pea, wheat + pea) | Increases yield; increases N fixation by legume intercrops; increases N accumulation in soil; reduces pest, disease, and weed problems. |
| 2. | Include high value legumes/vegetables in sequence (relay) combined with plastic house and drip irrigation | Legumes that fit well to the existing cropping sequence increase net income; mitigates dry season outmigration. |
| 3. | FYM preparation under shade, use of terrace gravity flow to collect livestock urine | Improves manure quality (% NPK) and matures earlier than local practice (exposed FYM heap). |
| 4. | Improved variety/seeds of field crops | Increases yield and mature earlier than local varieties. |
| 5. | Planting legume seeds coated with appropriate rhizobia strains/ micronutrients (B + Mo) | Increases nodule numbers; improves N-fixation from atmosphere; enhances crop growth and yield. |
| 6. | Balanced use of chemical fertilizers and organic manure/FYM | Increases yield of the primary crop and the following season's crop; improves soil nutrient content. |
| 7. | Fertilizer micro-dosing | Spot placement of small amounts of fertilizer to seeds/seedlings reduces fertilizer requirements without reduction in grain yield; saves on input cost. |
| 8. | Seed cleaning and treatment before seeding | Increases germination, seedling health and vigor by reducing pests and pathogens. |
| 9. | Zero- or minimum tillage | Growing crops or pasture in hills and mountains with minimal soil disturbance; protects topsoil from wind and water. |
| 10. | Adds nitrogen and organic matter to the soil; increases grain yield. | |
| 11. | Integrated rice-fish system | Offers complementary use of water and land; improves soil fertility; control aquatic weeds and pest; increase land productivity. |
| 1. | Jab drill planter | Saves time compared to traditional seed sowing techniques (e.g., behind-the-plogh method); useful for narrow terraces; easy to operate and potentially inexpensive; most effective after initial field preparation (e.g., by mini-tiller). |
| 2. | Mini-tillers | Reduces need for bullocks for field preparation; can be used on narrow terraces; expensive but can be purchased by the community. |
| 3. | Drip irrigation/fertigation | Use of drip-via-gravity provided by terraces to irrigate crops and for applying soluble fertilizers; reduces operation costs and prevents nutrient loss. |
| 1. | Handheld corn sheller | Inexpensive, easy to use and efficient; requires less effort and reduces drudgery than traditional practices (e.g., beating cobs with sticks). |
| 2. | Fork weeders/farm rakes | More efficient collection of weeds from crop fields planted in rows; reduces backache while weeding. |
| 3. | Electric/gas grain threshers | Requires less time and physical efforts; expensive but can be purchased by the community. |
| 4. | Gloves and knee-pads | Reduces pain in hands and knees during harvesting and intercultural operations; reduces female drudgery. |
| 5. | Low-oxygen grain storage bags | Reduces insect damage; increases seed quality during storage. |
| 6. | Grafting and budding knife | Effective for large scale multiplication of vegetatively propagated fruits (citrus, pear, guava) and fodder trees. |
| 7. | Rain water harvesting structures (tank/pipes, plastic pond) | Beneficial to irrigate high value crops during the prolonged dry season. |
| 8. | Plastic house | Permits pre-season nursery establishment to extend the growing season; facilitates off-season production of vegetables. |
| 9. | Fruit picker | Avoids danger while picking fruits from high branches; provides less or no damage to fruits. |
| 10. | Magnifying glass | Shows magnified image of seeds; helps separate healthy seeds from diseased or damaged seeds. |
| 11. | Manual flour grinder | Hand operated grain mill in remote hills helps prepare flour at home. |
| 12. | Back support belt | Back-brace for lifting heavy equipment + harvest up/down terraces reduces women drudgery. |
Wall growing crops suitable for terrace base and edges.
| Wall Base Crops | Black pepper | Dried fruits used as spice and seasoning. | |
| Bottle gourds | Fruit used as vegetable. | ||
| Broom grass | Flowers are used as cleaning tool or broom; shoots are used as fuel and fodder during lean periods. | ||
| Cardamom | Seeds used as highly aromatic spice. | ||
| Chayote | Fruit, leaf tip, and tuber used as vegetables; prolific; one plant produces ~250 kg of fruit and 20–25 kg of root/tubers (SAKNepal, | ||
| Pumpkin | Fruit and leaf tips consumed as vegetables; wider leaves cover ground surface. | ||
| Rose | Mostly used as cut flowers; also used to make oil, water/syrup, and essence. | ||
| Sponge Gourds | Fresh fruits used as vegetable. | ||
| Vetiver | Drought and frost tolerant hedge crops; deep, strong and fibrous root system bind with the earth making the underground wall strong; the above ground cover slows or stops surface runoff. | ||
| Yam | Starchy tuber vegetables; shoots cover vertical slopes; one plant produces 10–15 kg of tubers (SAKNepal, | ||
| Wall Edge Crops | Blackgram | Native bean of India, dried and split seeds used as a pulse; leaves and seed husks used as animal feed. | |
| Cowpea | Annual vine/bush type legume; fresh pods and seeds consumed as vegetables; plant biomass used as animal feed. | ||
| Horsegram | Annual legume, dried seeds used as a pulse or cattle feed; leaves and seed husks used as animal feed. | ||
| Napier grass | Perennial tropical grass with low water and nutrient requirements; high biomass production; can be harvested 4–6 times per year. | ||
| Pigeon pea | Drought resistant perennial legumes; young seeds are consumed fresh as a vegetable and dried seeds as a pulse; leaves and seed husks used as animal feed. | ||
| Rice bean | Warm season annual vine legume with edible beans used as vegetable; prolific. | ||
| Soybean | Annual legume, fresh pods and seeds consumed as vegetable; seeds also processed for their oil and protein for the animal feed industry. |
Common medicinal plants found in the Himalayan region (Source: Manandhar, .
| Drymaria | Annual herb with slender, smooth stem; juice of plant is applied on forehead to treat headache. | |
| Spiny Amaranth | Annual herb; leaves used as vegetable; a paste of root is applied to treat boils; juice of root used to treat fever. | |
| Hemp/Marijuana | Annual herb; leaf juice is given to cattle suffering from diarrhea; leaf is mixed with cattle feed. | |
| Creeping Woodsorrel | Annual/short-lived perennial herbs; plant juice is applied to treat fresh cuts and wounds. | |
| Common/Stinging Nettle | Herbaceous perennial; fresh leaves used as vegetables; leaf powder used as herbal tea; paste mixed with marble powder applied to set dislocated bone. | |
| Centella | Herbaceous perennial; plant juice is used as tonic early in the morning. | |
| False Goat's Beard | Perennial herb; rhizomatous flowering plants; juice of root used to treat diarrhea and dysentery. | |
| Bajradanti | Perennial shrub; root powder used for tooth powder; small piece of root is kept between the jaws to treat toothache. | |
| Indian Braberry | An erect spiny shrub; decoction of bark is used to treat eye and skin disorders. | |
| Indian Rhododendron | A flowering shrub; plant juice is used to treat cough and cold. | |
| Fire Flame Bush | A large shrub with spreading branches; flower juice used to treat diarrhea and dysentery. | |
| Butea | A perennial non-climber shrub; seed powder is used as an anthelmintic medicine. | |
| Castor Oil Plant | A perennial shrub; flower juice is applied to alleviate cuts and wounds. | |
| Staggerbush | A deciduous shrub; paste of tender leaf is applied to treat scabies. | |
| Bayberry | An ethno-medicinal tree; juice of bark used to treat dysentery with bloody stool. | |
| Needlewood Tree | An evergreen tree; juice of bark is applied to treat fresh cuts and wounds. | |
| Prickly Ash | A deciduous spice tree; paste of bark is applied to treat toothache. | |
| White Cedar/China Berry | A deciduous tree with pesticide and medicinal properties; paste of bark is used as anthelmintic. | |
| Nutgall Tree | A dioecious tree; paste of fruit is used to treat diarrhea and dysentery. |
Summary of challenges and opportunities in terrace agriculture.
| Limited land for intensive agriculture | High value crops and cropping systems on terraces; utilization of vertical slopes (i.e., wall), and edges |
| Narrow terrace design; difficult to mechanize farm operation | Introduction of light and low cost farm tools |
| Increased labor and female drudgery | Introduction of tools and practices that reduce female drudgery in agriculture |
| Poor access to services, inputs and markets | Piggy-backing onto pre-existing snackfood/ alcohol/cigarette distribution networks in rural areas; activities to strengthen market networks, capacity building |
| Erosion and soil loss | Cover crops, catch crops, mulching, living barriers |
| Poverty | Introduction of purchasable, low cost ($1–10) technologies |
| Labor shortage | Labor saving tools and techniques |
| Illiteracy/cultural barriers | Picture illustrations of best practices and tool use; location specific practices |
| Low yield and net income | Practices that enhance land productivity and resource use efficiency |