This MCQ module is based on: Types of Farming & Cropping Seasons Class 10 NCERT Geography Ch 4 Part 1
Types of Farming & Cropping Seasons Class 10 NCERT Geography Ch 4 Part 1
Types of Farming & Cropping Seasons
NCERT Contemporary India-II | Chapter 4: Agriculture
Why Is Agriculture Important for India's Economy?
India is fundamentally an agricultural nation. Roughly two-thirds of its population depends on agriculture? for its livelihood. As a primary activity, farming not only produces most of the food we consume daily but also supplies essential raw materials to many industries. Products like tea, coffee, and spices are also major export earners for the country.
Can you identify industries that rely on agricultural raw materials? Think about what you use daily — your clothes, the sugar in your tea, the oil used for cooking.
What Are the Different Types of Farming in India?
Agriculture has been practised in India for millennia. Over time, cultivation methods have evolved significantly, shaped by physical environment, technological advances, and socio-cultural traditions. Indian farming ranges from basic subsistence methods to highly commercialised systems. The main farming types practised across the country are outlined below.
Primitive Subsistence Farming
This is essentially a slash and burn? method of cultivation. Farmers clear a patch of forest land, cultivate cereals and food crops for their own consumption, and once the soil loses its fertility, they move on to a fresh patch. This shifting allows nature to restore the land over time. Since no fertilisers or modern inputs are used, productivity remains quite low.
- Jhumming — North-Eastern states (Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland)
- Pamlou — Manipur
- Dipa — Bastar district of Chhattisgarh
- Bewar / Dahiya — Madhya Pradesh
- Podu / Penda — Andhra Pradesh
- Kumari — Western Ghats
- Valre / Waltre — South-eastern Rajasthan
- Khil — Himalayan belt
- Kuruwa — Jharkhand
Intensive Subsistence Farming
In densely populated regions, farmers cannot afford to leave land fallow. Successive generations inherit and divide the family landholding (due to the right of inheritance?), making each plot increasingly smaller and economically unviable. Despite this, in the absence of alternative livelihoods, farmers squeeze the maximum possible yield from every bit of available land, creating enormous pressure on agricultural resources.
Commercial Farming
The degree of commercialisation varies across regions. For instance, rice functions as a commercial crop in Punjab and Haryana (where surplus production is sold), but in Odisha it is mainly a subsistence crop (consumed by the farming family itself).
Plantation Farming
Plantation agriculture? sits at the interface of farming and industry. Important plantation crops in India include tea, coffee, rubber, sugarcane, and banana. Tea plantations in Assam and North Bengal, and coffee estates in Karnataka are well-known examples. A well-developed transport and communication network connecting plantation areas to processing units and markets is crucial for this system to thrive.
Rinjha lives with her family in a village near Diphu in Assam. She watches her family clear, slash, and burn patches of forest for cultivation, and helps irrigate fields using water channelled through bamboo canals from a nearby spring. Her family will search for a fresh patch of land next season once the current soil loses fertility.
Questions to consider:
- What type of farming is Rinjha's family practising?
- What crops might her family grow under this system?
- Why must her family move to new land each season?
What Are Rabi, Kharif, and Zaid Cropping Seasons?
India's physical diversity and cultural plurality are reflected in its agricultural practices. The country cultivates a vast variety of food grains, fibre crops, vegetables, fruits, spices, and condiments. India recognises three distinct cropping seasons — Rabi?, Kharif?, and Zaid?.
| Season | Sowing Period | Harvesting Period | Key Crops | Key Regions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rabi | October – December | April – June | Wheat, barley, peas, gram, mustard | Punjab, Haryana, HP, J&K, Uttarakhand, UP |
| Kharif | June – July (onset of monsoon) | September – October | Paddy, maize, jowar, bajra, tur, cotton, jute, groundnut, soyabean | Assam, WB, coastal Odisha, AP, Telangana, TN, Kerala, Maharashtra, UP, Bihar |
| Zaid | March – May (between rabi & kharif) | May – June | Watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, vegetables, fodder crops | Irrigated areas across the country |
India's Cropping Seasons — Monthly Calendar
L4 AnalyseFigure: Duration of Rabi, Kharif and Zaid seasons across the calendar year
Classify the following crops into their correct cropping season (Rabi, Kharif, or Zaid):
- Wheat
- Cotton
- Watermelon
- Mustard
- Paddy
- Cucumber
Competency-Based Questions
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the different types of farming in India?
India has four main types of farming: (1) Primitive subsistence farming, which is a small-scale method using traditional tools like hoe, digging sticks, and family labour, including shifting cultivation (jhum) in northeast India; (2) Intensive subsistence farming, practised on small plots with high labour input, common in densely populated areas; (3) Commercial farming, which uses modern inputs like HYV seeds, fertilisers, and machines on large farms for profit, including sugarcane, cotton, and tea farming; (4) Plantation farming, a single-crop large-scale system combining agriculture with industry, like tea in Assam and coffee in Karnataka.
What is the difference between Rabi and Kharif crops?
Rabi crops are sown in winter (October-December) and harvested in summer (April-June). Major rabi crops include wheat, barley, peas, gram, and mustard. They require cool growing conditions and bright sunshine for ripening. Kharif crops are sown with the onset of monsoon (June-July) and harvested after the monsoon (September-October). Major kharif crops include rice, jowar, bajra, maize, cotton, and groundnut. They need warm and humid conditions with substantial rainfall during the growing period.
What is shifting cultivation and where is it practised?
Shifting cultivation (also called slash-and-burn or jhum cultivation) is a primitive farming method where a patch of forest is cleared by cutting and burning, crops are grown for 2-3 years until soil fertility declines, and then farmers move to a new patch. It is practised in northeast India (Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland), parts of Odisha, Chhattisgarh, and Andhra Pradesh. The practice is known by different local names: jhum in Assam, podu in Andhra Pradesh, and bewar in Madhya Pradesh.
What is plantation farming?
Plantation farming is a type of commercial farming where a single crop is grown on a large area for commercial processing and export. It combines agriculture with industry, as crops are processed in factories on or near the estate. Examples include tea plantations in Assam and West Bengal, coffee in Karnataka, rubber in Kerala, and sugarcane in Uttar Pradesh. Plantation farming requires large capital investment, extensive land, skilled labour, good transport links, and processing facilities. It was introduced in India during the colonial period.
What is Zaid season and what crops are grown?
Zaid is a short cropping season between Rabi and Kharif, occurring from March to June (summer months). Crops grown during the Zaid season include watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, and vegetables. These crops require warm to hot weather and longer day length. Zaid crops are typically grown with irrigation support, especially in northern India. While less commercially significant than Rabi and Kharif, Zaid helps farmers utilise land during the gap period and provides additional income.
What percentage of India's population depends on agriculture?
Approximately two-thirds (about 66%) of India's population depends on agriculture for livelihood, making it the backbone of the Indian economy. Agriculture contributes around 17-18% to the country's GDP. The NCERT textbook highlights the contrast between the large workforce in agriculture and its relatively lower contribution to GDP, indicating low productivity. India is among the world's largest producers of rice, wheat, pulses, tea, coffee, and spices, yet many farmers remain below the poverty line.