The following is a list of crop production terms used to index Resources and Learning searches.
Agroforestry: An agroforestry system is a form of multiple land use where woody perennials (trees, shrubs, bamboos, palm trees, woody lianas) are grown on the same land management unit with crops and/or animals.
Alley Cropping: Growing annual crops in the space between rows of long-term tree crops.
Application Rate Management: The use of information, such as soil type and soil analysis, to determine optimal nutrient application rates.
Beekeeping: The maintenance of honey bee colonies for pollination, honey production and breeding.
Biological Inoculants: Microbial soil amendments that promote plant growth by increasing plant-available nutrients or stimulating root growth.
Catch Crops: A quick growing crop, planted and harvested between two regular crops.
Conservation Tillage: Any of several farming methods that provide for seed germination, plant growth, and weed control yet maintain effective ground cover throughout the year and disturb the soil as little as possible.
Continuous Cropping: The growing of a single crop species on a field year after year.
Contour Farming: Field operations such as plowing, planting, cultivating, and harvesting on the contour, or at right angles to the natural slope, to reduce soil erosion, protect soil fertility, and use water more efficiently.
Cover Crops: A crop grown between periods of regular production of the main crop for the purposes of protecting the soil from erosion and improving soil productivity, health and quality.
Crop Improvement And Selection: The improvement of crop performance through breeding, grafting and other techniques.
Crop Rotation: System of cultivation where different crops are planted in consecutive growing seasons to maintain soil fertility.
Cropping Systems: The pattern of crops grown on a given piece of land, or order in which the crops are cultivated over a fixed period.
Double Cropping: Two different crops grown on the same area in one growing season.
Drainage Systems: Manmade systems of furrows, ditches, tile drains, pipes, etc. which collect and remove water from a central location.
Drought Tolerance: Selecting crops or crop varieties because of their relative ability to withstand arid or drought conditions.
Fallow: Leaving land that is plowed and tilled unseeded for a growing season.
Fertigation: The application of fertilizers or other water-soluble products through an irrigation system.
Fertilizers: For synthetic fertilizers.
Foliar Feeding: The application of liquid fertilizers directly to crop leaves.
Food Processing: Includes resources on postharvest treatment, processing facilities, safety and quality.
Food Processing Facilities: Facilities used to prepare produce for the market and create value-added products. Includes community kitchens.
Food Product Quality/Safety: Resources that can help producers address issues related to food quality and safety.
Forest Farming: The production of specialty crops under a forest canopy that has been modified for the purpose.
Forest/Woodlot Management: The management of a forest or woodlot to preserve its long-term economic, environmental and recreational value.
Forestry: Includes both forest management and agroforestry topics.
Grafting: The fusion of two or more different plants in order to take advantage of attributes found in each one.
Greenhouses: Glass buildings with heating that are used to grow crops throughout the year.
High Tunnels Or Hoop Houses: Large, unheated structures made with metal poles and plastic sheeting that protect crops against snow and low temperatures.
Intercropping: The growing of two or more different species of crops simultaneously, as in alternate rows in the same field or single tract of land.
Irrigation: Includes all artificial methods of applying water to crops.
Low Tunnels: Short, unheated structures that protect crops against snow and low temperatures, and are easy to set up and take down.
Multiple Cropping: The growing of more than one crop consecutively in the same field in a single year.
Municipal Wastes: Includes the use of municipal waste as a soil amendment and fertilizer.
No-Till: Growing crops or pasture without disturbing the soil through tillage.
Nurseries: Buildings where plants are propagated and grown to usable size.
Nutrient Cycling: The movement and exchange of organic and inorganic matter back into the production of living matter.
Nutrient Management: Managing the amount, source, placement, form and timing of the application of nutrients and soil amendments to ensure adequate soil fertility for plant production and to minimize the potential for environmental degradation, particularly water quality impairment.
Organic Fertilizers: For fertilizers derived from plant or animal matter.
Plant Breeding And Genetics: The use of genetic information and breeding techniques to develop improved plant varieties.
Pollination: Includes topics related to the use of pollinators in crop production.
Pollinator Habitat: The flowering plants and nesting sites that serve to support the year-round presence of pollinators.
Pollinator Health: Resources that address pests of pollinators and other health concerns, such as pesticide exposure.
Postharvest Treatment: The preparation of gathered or harvested commodities for fresh market or processing.
Relay Cropping: The seeding of one crop into another standing crop, e.g., winter wheat into standing soybeans.
Ridge Tillage: A system of scalping and planting on ridges built during cultivation of the previous year's crop.
Row Covers (For Season Extension): Fabric that covers the soil and protects rows of crops from the cold.
Season Extension: The practice of cultivating a crop beyond its normal outdoor growing season, typically through the use of structures or shelters.
Seed Saving: The practice of keeping seeds or other reproductive material from a crop for use in the future.
Shade Cloth: A material that creates shade, thereby protecting summer-season crops from intense heat.
Silvopasture: The combination of trees with forage and livestock production.
Strip Tillage: Tillage that disturbs only an 8- to 10-inch strip of soil that will contain the seed row, wider than zone tillage.
Stubble Mulching: Leaving the crop residue or stubble in place on the field as a surface cover during fallow.
Terraces: Natural or manmade landforms which run perpendicular to the slope and are bordered on one side by a steep ascending slope and on the other side by a steep descending slope.
Tissue Analysis: A chemical measurement of essential plant nutrients within a sample of plant tissue.
Varieties And Cultivars: Resources that compare the production needs, strengths and weaknesses of different crop varieties and cultivars.
Water Management: Includes information on irrigation, drainage, water storage and other topics.
Water Storage: Includes all methods of storing water for later use, including natural stores such as aquifers, soil water and wetlands, and artificial stores such as manmade ponds, tanks and keyline designs.
Windbreaks: Linear plantings of trees and shrubs designed to protect crops and soil from wind damage, and provide other services.
Winter Storage: Facilities and strategies for storing harvested crops so they can be sold during the winter.
Zone Till: Tillage that disturbs only a 5- to 6-inch strip of soil that will contain the seed row, narrower than strip tillage.