This MCQ module is based on: Cropping Seasons, Major Crops & Types of Farming
Cropping Seasons, Major Crops & Types of Farming
This assessment will be based on: Cropping Seasons, Major Crops & Types of Farming
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Cropping Seasons in India: Kharif, Rabi, Zaid and Major Crops
NCERT India: People and Economy — Unit III, Chapter 3, Part 2
Agricultural Land Use in India — Why Crops Matter
Land has many uses, but for the great majority of Indians, the most important use is agriculture. Three reasons make land especially crucial for farming:
- Agriculture is a purely land-based activity. Unlike a factory or a software firm, a farm cannot be relocated to a tower in a city; the soil is the means of production.
- The quality of land has a direct bearing on agricultural productivity in a way that it does not for industry — barren soils simply cannot match the yields of fertile alluvium.
- In rural areas, owning land is more than economic value. It is a social asset, a credit security, and a buffer against natural hazards and life contingencies.
Lack of access to land is therefore directly correlated with poverty in rural India. The total stock of agricultural land — or total cultivable land? — is calculated by adding up the net sown area, all fallow lands and the culturable wasteland. Over the years, this stock has marginally declined as a percentage of the reporting area, while net sown area has plateaued near 46 per cent. The scope for bringing more land under the plough is now severely limited.
The cropping intensity (CI) is calculated as: CI (%) = (Gross Cropped Area / Net Sown Area) × 100. A value of 100 means the land is cropped only once a year; 200 means a perfect double-cropping system. India's national average has been creeping up towards 150.
Cropping Seasons in India: Kharif, Rabi and Zaid
Across the northern and interior parts of India, the agricultural year is divided into three distinct cropping seasons. The boundaries between them are set, above all, by the rhythm of the monsoon and the swing of temperature between summer and winter.
Fig 3.3 — The Indian Cropping Calendar — Kharif, Rabi and Zaid
In the south, where temperatures stay high all year, the kharif–rabi–zaid distinction blurs and the same crop can be raised thrice on irrigated land.
Kharif (June – September)
The kharif? season largely coincides with the south-west monsoon. The hot, humid months from June to September favour the cultivation of tropical crops such as rice, cotton, jute, jowar, bajra, tur, maize, soyabean, groundnut and ragi. Sowing is done as the rains arrive; harvest follows in October.
Rabi (October – March)
The rabi? season begins with the onset of winter in October–November and ends in March–April. The low temperatures of this period are well suited to temperate and subtropical crops such as wheat, gram, mustard, barley, peas and rapeseeds.
Zaid (April – June)
Zaid? is a short-duration summer cropping season that begins after the rabi crops have been harvested. The crops grown in zaid — watermelon, cucumber, vegetables and fodder — require irrigation, since natural rainfall in this period is minimal.
| Cropping Season | Northern States | Southern States |
|---|---|---|
| Kharif (Jun–Sep) | Rice, Cotton, Bajra, Maize, Jowar, Tur | Rice, Maize, Ragi, Jowar, Groundnut |
| Rabi (Oct–Mar) | Wheat, Gram, Rapeseeds and Mustard, Barley | Rice, Maize, Ragi, Groundnut, Jowar |
| Zaid (Apr–Jun) | Vegetables, Fruits, Fodder | Rice, Vegetables, Fodder |
Compare the kharif and rabi columns for northern and southern states. List two crops that appear in both the kharif and rabi seasons in the south but in only one season in the north. What does this tell you about southern climate?
Types of Farming in India
Indian farming can be classified along several axes. The single most important is the main source of moisture for the crop.
💧 Irrigated Farming
Crops are watered through canals, tube-wells, tanks, drip and sprinkler systems. Two further sub-types:
- Protective irrigation? — supplements rainfall to protect crops from moisture-deficiency. The aim is to spread the available water over the maximum possible area.
- Productive irrigation? — supplies sufficient soil moisture to maximise productivity. The water input per hectare is much higher.
🌤 Rainfed (Barani) Farming
Crops depend entirely on rainfall. Sub-types:
- Dryland farming — in regions with annual rainfall less than 75 cm. Hardy, drought-resistant crops like ragi, bajra, moong, gram and guar are grown alongside soil-moisture conservation and rainwater harvesting practices.
- Wetland farming — in regions where rainfall exceeds soil-moisture requirements. Water-intensive crops like rice, jute and sugarcane are grown; aquaculture is also practised in fresh water bodies.
Other classifications cut across these categories:
Foodgrains: Cereals and Pulses
Foodgrains occupy about two-thirds of the total cropped area in India. Whether the local economy is subsistence or commercial, they are the dominant crops everywhere. By the structure of grain, foodgrains are split into cereals and pulses.
Cereals alone occupy roughly 54 per cent of total cropped area. India produces about 11 per cent of the world's cereals and ranks third after China and the USA. Cereals are further divided into fine grains (rice, wheat) and coarse grains or millets (jowar, bajra, maize, ragi).
Rice
Rice — The Staple Cereal
Rice is the staple food for the overwhelming majority of Indians. Although it is regarded as a tropical-humid crop, modern varieties are grown from sea level to about 2,000 m altitude and from humid eastern India to the dry but irrigated tracts of Punjab, Haryana, western Uttar Pradesh and northern Rajasthan.
In the southern states and West Bengal the climate permits two or three rice crops in a year. West Bengal famously grows three crops — aus, aman and boro. In the Himalayas and the north-west, rice is grown only as a kharif crop during the south-west monsoon.
India contributes 22.07 per cent of world rice production and ranked second after China in 2018. About one-fourth of the country's cropped area is under rice. The leading producers are West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and Punjab; yields are highest in Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Haryana, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, West Bengal and Kerala. In the first four, almost all rice land is irrigated.
Rice cultivation in Punjab and Haryana — not traditional rice areas — was introduced in the 1970s following the Green Revolution. The IR-8 variety from the Philippines, genetically improved seeds, heavy fertiliser use and a dry climate that suppresses pests helped these states post the country's highest yields. Yields remain low in the rainfed lands of Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Odisha.
Wheat
Wheat — The Northern Stalk
Wheat is the second most important cereal in India. The country produces about 12.8 per cent of world wheat output (2017). Wheat is fundamentally a crop of the temperate zone, so it is sown in winter (rabi). About 85 per cent of India's wheat area is concentrated in the north and centre — the Indo-Gangetic plain, Malwa plateau and the Himalayas up to 2,700 m.
Being a rabi crop, wheat is mostly grown under irrigation. It survives as a rainfed crop only in the Himalayan highlands and parts of the Malwa plateau in Madhya Pradesh.
About 14 per cent of India's total cropped area is under wheat. Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan are the leading producers. Yields exceed 4,000 kg/ha in Punjab and Haryana, are moderate in Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Bihar, and stay low in the rainfed zones of Madhya Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir.
Coarse Cereals (Millets)
Coarse cereals together occupy about 16.5 per cent of total cropped area. They are drought-tolerant grains essential to the food security of dry regions.
Jowar (Sorghum)
Jowar accounts for about 5.3 per cent of total cropped area. It is the main food crop of the semi-arid central and southern interior. Maharashtra alone produces more than half of India's jowar. South of the Vindhyas it is rainfed and yields are low; in the north it is mostly grown as a kharif fodder crop.
Bajra (Pearl Millet)
Bajra is sown under hot and dry conditions in the north-west and west. It is a hardy crop, resistant to dry spells and drought, and is grown alone or in mixed cropping. It occupies about 5.2 per cent of cropped area. Yields have improved in Rajasthan, Haryana and Gujarat with drought-resistant varieties and expansion of irrigation.
Maize
Maize is grown under semi-arid conditions and on inferior soils. It occupies about 3.6 per cent of cropped area. Maize is sown all over India except Punjab and the eastern and north-eastern regions. Yields are higher in southern states and decline towards central India.
Pulses
Pulses are essential in the vegetarian Indian diet because of their high protein content. As legumes, they enrich the soil through nitrogen fixation. India is the world's leading producer. Pulses occupy about 11 per cent of cropped area, mostly in the drylands of the Deccan, central plateaus and the north-west. Gram and tur are the chief pulses.
Gram (Chickpea)
Gram is a sub-tropical, mostly rainfed rabi crop grown in central, western and north-western India. One or two light showers or irrigations suffice. It has been displaced by wheat in Haryana, Punjab and northern Rajasthan after the Green Revolution. Today, gram covers only about 2.8 per cent of cropped area, with yields that fluctuate.
Tur (Arhar / Pigeon Pea)
Tur, also called red gram or pigeon pea, is the second most important pulse. It is grown on marginal lands in the rainfed dry areas of central and southern India. The crop occupies about 2 per cent of total cropped area. Maharashtra alone contributes about one-third of national output. Per-hectare output is low and inconsistent.
Punjab is not in the rice belt of natural India — its rainfall is low and its summers blistering. Yet today it has the highest rice yields in the country. Trace the chain of factors that turned a wheat-bowl into a rice basket.
Oilseeds and Other Crops
Oilseeds are produced for extracting edible oils. The drylands of Malwa plateau, Marathwada, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Telangana, Rayalaseema and the Karnataka plateau are the country's oilseed belts. Oilseeds together occupy about 14 per cent of total cropped area. The principal crops are groundnut, rapeseed and mustard, soyabean and sunflower.
Groundnut
India produces about 18.8 per cent of world groundnut (2018). It is largely a rainfed kharif crop of the drylands, but in southern India it is also grown in rabi. Groundnut covers about 3.6 per cent of cropped area. Yields are highest in Tamil Nadu (partly irrigated) and lower in Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka.
Rapeseed and Mustard
This group includes rai, sarson, toria and taramira. They are grown in north-western and central India during rabi. Frost-sensitive, but with irrigation and improved seeds their yields have stabilised. About two-thirds of the cultivated area under these oilseeds is irrigated. They occupy about 2.5 per cent of total cropped area. Yields are comparatively high in Haryana and Rajasthan.
Soyabean & Sunflower
Soyabean is mostly grown in Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, which together produce about 90 per cent of India's soyabean output. Sunflower cultivation is concentrated in Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and adjoining areas of Maharashtra. Sunflower is a minor crop in northern India, but yields there are high due to irrigation.
Fibre Crops — Cotton and Jute
Cotton
Cotton is a tropical kharif crop of the semi-arid zones. India lost much of its cotton area to Pakistan at Partition, but acreage has expanded markedly over the last 50 years. India grows both short-staple Indian cotton and long-staple American cotton (called narma in the north-west). Clear skies are needed during flowering.
India ranks second in the world in cotton production after China. Cotton occupies about 4.7 per cent of cropped area. Three growing belts exist: (1) Punjab, Haryana and northern Rajasthan in the north-west; (2) Gujarat and Maharashtra in the west; (3) plateaus of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu in the south. Yields are high under irrigation in the north-west; very low in rainfed Maharashtra. Bt cotton — a genetically modified pest-resistant variety — has been widely adopted in this belt.
Jute
Jute is used for coarse cloth, bags, sacks and decorative items. It is a cash crop of West Bengal and the adjoining eastern states. India lost large jute-growing areas to East Pakistan (Bangladesh) at Partition. Today India produces about three-fifth of world jute output, with West Bengal contributing about three-fourth of the country's production. Bihar and Assam are the other producers. Jute covers only about 0.5 per cent of total cropped area.
Other Important Crops
Sugarcane
Sugarcane is a tropical crop. Although it can be grown rainfed in sub-humid areas, it is largely an irrigated crop in India. In the Indo-Gangetic plain, Uttar Pradesh dominates; in western India Maharashtra and Gujarat lead; in the south irrigated tracts of Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh are important. India was the second-largest producer after Brazil (2018), accounting for about 19.7 per cent of world output, but sugarcane covers only 2.4 per cent of India's cropped area. Yields are highest in southern India and lowest in northern India.
Tea
Tea is a plantation beverage crop. Black tea is fermented; green tea is unfermented. Both are rich in caffeine and tannin. Originally an indigenous crop of north Chinese hills, tea grows on undulating hills with well-drained soils in humid and sub-humid tropics and sub-tropics. In India tea plantations began in the 1840s in the Brahmaputra valley of Assam — still the country's biggest tea region. Plantations later spread to the sub-Himalayan belt of West Bengal (Darjeeling, Jalpaiguri, Cooch Behar) and to the Nilgiri and Cardamom hills of the Western Ghats.
India produces about 21.22 per cent of world tea (2018) and ranks second among tea exporters after China. Assam alone has about 53.2 per cent of the country's tea area and contributes more than half its production.
Coffee
Coffee is a tropical plantation crop. Three varieties exist — Arabica, Robusta and Liberica. India largely grows the superior Arabica, which has high international demand. Yet India produces only about 3.17 per cent of world coffee and ranks eighth in 2018 after Brazil, Vietnam, Indonesia, Colombia, Honduras, Ethiopia and Peru. Coffee is cultivated in the highlands of the Western Ghats in Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu. Karnataka alone accounts for more than two-thirds of national output.
Fig 3.4 — Top Crop-Producing States of India (Schematic)
Indicative locations only — not for navigation. Each ellipse marks the dominant cropping region.
Fig 3.5 — Top Wheat and Rice Producing States (Indicative Share, %)
UP leads in wheat; West Bengal in rice. Punjab and Haryana excel in yield even on smaller acreage.
On an outline map of India, mark the leading producing states of each crop:
- Rice (3) — Wheat (3) — Cotton (3) — Sugarcane (2) — Tea (2) — Coffee (1)
Why have commercial farming and modernisation taken root mainly in the irrigated regions, while subsistence farming continues to dominate rainfed areas? Discuss the long-term implications.
📝 Competency-Based Questions (CBQ)
Reason (R): Southern India has high temperatures throughout the year, so the same tropical crops can be grown in any season provided soil moisture is available.
Reason (R): These states have a humid tropical climate naturally suited to rice cultivation.
Reason (R): Pulses are legume crops that fix atmospheric nitrogen in the soil through bacteria in their root nodules.