Title: Intercropping
1Intercropping
2Cropping Systems
- 1. Monoculture (one crop)
- 2. Polyculture (many crops)
- a) crops separated in time crop rotation, cover
crops - b) crops at same time intercropping
- c) combinations relay cropping
3Intercropping
- Uncommon in modern US agriculture
- Common in Tropics (Carroll, 1990 98 of cowpeas
grown in Africa are intercropped)
4Intercropping
- Uncommon in modern US agriculture
- Common in Tropics
- Also called Mixed Cropping more than one crop
at same time - Intercropping vs monoculture --- problems with
mechanized systems
5Types of Intercropping
- Mixtures of crops (no rows)
- Alternate rows or strips
- Relay cropping 2nd crop planted during life
cycle of first crop
6Intercropping
Row Mixed
Smith et al., 2001
7Types of Intercropping
- Mixtures of crops (no rows)
- Alternate rows or strips
- Relay cropping 2nd crop planted during life
cycle of first crop - May have various combinations of these !!
8Types of Intercropping
- Mixtures of crops (no rows)
- Alternate rows or strips
- Relay cropping 2nd crop planted during life
cycle of first crop - Agroforestry
9Agroforestry Effects of Trees
- Shield smaller shade-tolerant crops, vines
- Stabilize temperatures
- Permanent reservoirs for parasitoids predators
- Slow decomposition of organic matter
- Supply nutrients mulch via leaf litter, etc.
10(No Transcript)
11Cacao Intercrop
- Cacao main cash crop, but takes 4-5 yrs to
produce. - This farmer is maximizing the efficiency of his
land by growing short duration, fast growing food
crops that provide income and food for the
family, as well as shade, leaf litter, and
erosion control in cacao grove.
12Cacao Intercrop
- Plantain Bananas, Cocoyam, Papaya, Sugar cane
(coconut and oil palms, rubber, etc.) - Microclimate for Cacao Shade, humidity, leaf
litter (nutrients, OM, soil moisture, weed
control), windbreak. - Economically important crops food for farmer
13Leucaena
14Erosion Control
15Advantages of Intercropping
- Increased yield per ha
- Less competition
- Better partitioning of resources
16Advantages of Intercropping
- Increased yield per ha
- Yield stability, greater variety of food crops in
small farm plots - Protection against risk and environmental
extremes (crop diversity, mutual shading, etc.)
17Advantages of Intercropping cont.
- More efficient use of resources (land, vertical
space, sunlight, etc.) - Improved pest management
- Other (improved soil quality, physical support
for vine crops, maintain genetic diversity, etc. )
18Competition --- or - ?
- Plant competition no advantage if both plant
species aggressively pursue resources in same
niche intercropping a hindrance instead of a
benefit.
19Potential competition or compatibility can vary
with situation, depends on
- Crop species or cultivars
- Density of each species
- Arrangement (in rows, strips, etc.)
- Timing of planting of each crop (e.g., corn and
vining beans)
20Competitive Production
- Advantage
- If interspecific competition lt intraspecific
competition
Interspecific between different
species Intraspecific between members of the
same species
21Determining Intercrop Advantage Land Equivalent
Ratio
- amount of monocultured land needed to produce
same yield as intercrop
Photo Thomas Wright Photo P. E.
Hildebrand
22Land Equivalent Ratio
- amount of monocultured land needed to produce
same yield as intercrop
Yield of crop 2 grown as intercrop Yield of crop
2 grown as monoculture
I1 I2 ---- ---- M1 M2
LER RY1 RY2
23Land Equivalent Ratio
- amount of monocultured land needed to produce
same yield as intercrop - If LER gt 1 intercrop is more efficient
- If LER lt 1 monoculture is more efficient
Yield of crop 2 grown as intercrop Yield of crop
2 grown as monoculture
I1 I2 ---- ---- M1 M2
LER RY1 RY2
24LER example
(kg/ha)
25Land Equivalent Ratio
Yield of crop 2 grown as intercrop Yield of crop
2 grown as monoculture
I1 I2 ---- ---- M1 M2
LER RY1 RY2
Corn I/M 3000/4000 Soybean
I/M 750/1000
26Land Equivalent Ratio
I1 I2 ---- ---- M1 M2
LER RY1 RY2
LER 3000/4000 750/1000 0.75 0.75 1.50
Corn Soybean
27Land Equivalent Ratio
1.5 ha of land needed to produce same amount
through monoculture
0.5 0.5 is expected just based on land area
LER 3000/4000 750/1000 0.75 0.75 1.50
Corn Soybean
28Mechanisms of Intercrop AdvantageCompetitive
Production
- Plants grow in same area but niches and
resource partitioning are somewhat different - Together, both plants use available resources
more efficiently
29Competitive Production
- Partitioning light (canopy differences in
intercrop vs monocrop, C3 vs C4 plants) - Partitioning soil resources (water, N, minerals,
etc.) - Example legume using N2 source, non-legume using
NO3- source)
30Mechanisms of Intercrop AdvantageFacilitation
- One plant modifies environment for benefit of
2nd species - Soil resources and nutrients (example legume
transfers more N into soil system, to the benefit
of both plant species) - Pest management (many examples of reduced pest
incidence in intercrops)
31Pepper in Perennial Peanut Living Mulch
32Reduced Pests in Polyculture - Several Hypotheses
to Explain Trend
- Disruptive Crop Hypothesis
- Natural Enemies Hypothesis
- Trap Crop Hypothesis
33Reduced Pests in Polyculture - Several Hypotheses
to Explain Trend
- 1. Disruptive Crop Hypothesis 2nd plant species
disrupts ability of pest to attack host crop
efficiently (interferes with insect host finding
volatiles, visual, etc.) - 2. Natural Enemies Hypothesis more predators
and parasites in intercrop - 3. Trap Crop Hypothesis 2nd plant species
attracts pest, keeping it away from the more
vulnerable crop
34Reduced Pests in Polyculture - Several Hypotheses
to Explain Trend
- 1. Disruptive Crop Hypothesis 2nd plant
species disrupts ability of pest to attack host
crop efficiently (interferes with insect host
finding volatiles, visual, etc.)
35Reduced Pests in Polyculture - Several Hypotheses
to Explain Trend
- 2. Natural Enemies Hypothesis more predators
and parasites in intercrop
36White Dill (Queen Anne Lace) Weedy Intercrop
Good Source of Natural Enemies
37Weedy Hedgerow
38 Sunflower hedgerow intercropped with peppers
enhances biological control!
- Attracts Orius spp. (minute pirate bug) and
- other beneficial insects.
- Food Resources and refuge for parasitoids
predators. - Provide a perch for birds who also prey on
insects.
Photo G. A. Jones
393. Trap Crop Hypothesis
- Pest diverted away from cash crop to less
important but more attractive trap crop - a) Density and timing of trap crop is critical
- too low ? pest not attracted away
- too high ? build up pests or attract more pests
into area. - b) Examples
- Lygus bugs attracted from cotton to strips of
alfalfa in California (Altieri, 1994) - Flea beetles from collard to cruciferous weeds
with stronger chemical attractants (Cromartie,
1991). - Others (Altieri, 1994, p. 33).
40Trap Crop
Altieri, 1994
41Trap Crop
- Could increase pests and cause more trouble in
some cases !!
42Assessment Pests and Natural Enemies in
Polyculture vs. Monoculture
- Andow (1991) summarized large number of
polyculture vs. monoculture studies. - Figure shows usual trends, but note exceptions.
- Results vary, depend on
- relative densities and ages of plants involved
- specific biologies of insects involved
43Assessment Intercropping Successful or Not?
32
27
Andow, 1991
44Polyculture vs Conventional Monoculture
- Magnitude of pest reduction in polyculture may be
small compared to insecticide treatment. - Yields are usually more in polyculture than in
monoculture (unsprayed). - Yields are usually more in monoculture sprayed
with insecticides than in polyculture. - Difficult to design experiments that compare
polyculture or monoculture methods often biased
toward one method or other.
45References
- Text, Ch. 13, pp. 266-276.
- Altieri, 1987. Ch. 9.
- Altieri, 1994. Biodiversity and Pest Management
in Agroecosystems. Food Products Press, New
York. - Andow, 1991. Pp. 257-284 in CRC Handbook of Pest
Management in Agriculture (Pimentel, ed.). CRC
Press, Boca Raton, FL. - Cromartie, 1991. Pp. 183-216 in CRC Handbook of
Pest Management in Agriculture. - Smith et al., 2001 Environ. Entomol. 3089-100.
- Tivy, 1992. Ch. 6, pp. 111-114.
- Vandermeer, 1990. Ch. 18 in Agroecology (Carroll,
Vandermeer, and Rosset, eds.). McGraw-Hill, New
York.