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Icse Rotation

Crop Production — Icse Rotation

Icse Rotation

Crop Rotation

What is Crop Rotation?

Crop rotation is the practice of growing different types of crops on the same piece of land in a planned sequence across different seasons or years.

Example: Season 1 → Wheat | Season 2 → Mustard | Season 3 → Legume (moong, chana) | repeat

Why Rotate Crops?

1. Soil Nutrient Management

  • Different crops absorb different nutrients → prevents depletion of one nutrient
  • Legumes (beans, peas, gram) host Rhizobium bacteria in root nodules → fix atmospheric N₂ into ammonium (natural fertiliser)
  • After legume crop, soil is nitrogen-enriched for the next cereal crop (wheat, rice)

2. Pest and Disease Control

  • Same crop every season = same pest population builds up
  • Rotation breaks the pest life cycle — pests dependent on one crop find no host the next season
  • Reduces need for pesticides

3. Weed Control

  • Different crops have different growing patterns → different weeds thrive
  • Rotation prevents any one weed from dominating the field

4. Soil Structure

  • Deep-rooted crops break up compacted soil layers
  • Shallow-rooted crops allow topsoil to recover
  • Different root systems create different pore structures → better water retention

Common Rotation Patterns in India

SeasonCropBenefit
Kharif (Jun-Oct)Rice/MaizeMain food crop
Rabi (Nov-Mar)WheatDifferent water requirement
Zaid (Apr-Jun)Moong/SunflowerLegume fixes nitrogen

Classic 3-year rotation: Cereal → Legume → Root vegetable (or fallow)

Green Manuring (related practice)

A legume crop is ploughed back into the soil while still green → decomposes → adds nitrogen and organic matter. Example: sunhemp (Crotalaria juncea) grown and ploughed in before the main crop.

Mixed Cropping vs Crop Rotation

FeatureMixed CroppingCrop Rotation
DefinitionTwo crops grown simultaneouslyDifferent crops in sequence
PurposeRisk reductionSoil health + pest control
ExampleWheat + gram togetherWheat (year 1) → Gram (year 2)

ICSE Focus

  • Key benefit: nitrogen enrichment via legume-Rhizobium partnership
  • Rotation = sustainable agriculture (reduces chemical input)
  • Alternating deep-rooted and shallow-rooted crops for soil structure
  • Green manuring as an extension of the same principle

Quick Check

  1. Why is a legume grown between two cereal crops?
  2. How does crop rotation help control pests?
  3. What is green manuring?
  4. Name two Kharif and two Rabi crops.
  5. Stretch: Why would a farmer growing the same crop every year need more fertiliser each year?

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What is Crop Rotation?
  • Why Rotate Crops?
  • Common Rotation Patterns in India
  • Green Manuring (related practice)

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