Skip to contentClass 10 Geography Chapter 4 Agriculture Notes
Agriculture and Industries in India
- India’s Agricultural Significance:
- Agriculturally important country.
- Two-thirds of population engaged in agriculture.
- Primary activity, major food production source.
- Food Production and Raw Materials:
- Produces most consumed food.
- Source of raw material for industries.
- Industries Based on Agricultural Raw Materials:
- Textile Industry:
- Cotton for clothing and fabrics.
- Food Processing Industry:
- Fruits, vegetables for processing.
- Paper Industry:
- Timber from trees for paper production.
- Sugar Industry:
- Sugarcane for sugar production.
- Biofuel Industry:
- Crops for biofuel extraction.
- Agricultural Exports:
- Tea, Coffee, Spices:
- Exported agricultural products.
- Boosts economy through international trade.
Evolution of Farming in India
- Historical Significance of Agriculture:
- Age-old economic activity in India.
- Evolved with changing factors.
- Factors Influencing Cultivation Methods:
- Physical Environment:
- Terrain, climate shape farming methods.
- Technological Know-how:
- Advances impact efficiency.
- Socio-Cultural Practices:
- Traditions influence farming practices.
- Diversity in Farming Types:
- Subsistence Farming:
- For personal consumption, small scale.
- Commercial Farming:
- For profit, larger scale.
- Present Farming Systems in India:
- Intensive Farming:
- Extensive Farming:
- Large land area, lower inputs.
- Plantation Farming:
- Cash crops like tea, coffee.
- Mixed and Multiple Cropping:
- Diverse crops for stability.
- Organic Farming:
- Environmentally friendly practices.
Primitive Subsistence Agriculture in India
- Definition and Characteristics:
- Practiced in limited regions of India.
- Relies on small patches of land.
- Uses primitive tools (hoe, dao, digging sticks).
- Involves family and community labor.
- Depends on monsoon and natural soil fertility.
- “Slash and Burn” Agriculture:
- Clearing land for cultivation.
- Growing cereals and food crops.
- Sustainability for family subsistence.
- Shifting Cultivation:
- Farmers move when soil fertility drops.
- Clear new patches for cultivation.
- Natural processes restore soil fertility.
- Low Productivity and Traditional Methods:
- Low land productivity.
- No modern inputs or fertilizers.
- Reliance on natural processes.
- Regional Names and Practices:
- Known by different names across India.
- Reflects regional variations.
Cultural Variations of “Slash and Burn” Agriculture
- Global Names for “Slash and Burn” Agriculture:
- Milpa: Mexico, Central America.
- Conuco: Venezuela.
- Roca: Brazil.
- Masole: Central Africa.
- Ladang: Indonesia.
- Ray: Vietnam.
- Regional Names in India:
- Bewar, Dahiya: Madhya Pradesh.
- Podu, Penda: Andhra Pradesh.
- Pama Dabi, Koman, Bringa: Odisha.
- Kumari: Western Ghats.
- Valre, Waltre: South-eastern Rajasthan.
- Khil: Himalayan belt.
- Kuruwa: Jharkhand.
- Jhumming: North-eastern region.
- Personal Story of Rinjha:
- Lives in Diphu, Assam.
- Observes family practicing “slash and burn” farming.
- Assists in irrigation using bamboo canal.
- Cherishes surroundings but unaware of soil fertility decline.
- Challenges and Sustainability:
- Soil fertility decline over time.
- Need for new patches of land.
- Sustainability concerns due to traditional methods.
Intensive Farming and Land Pressure
- Intensive Farming in Populated Areas:
- Practiced in densely populated regions.
- Focus on maximizing land productivity.
- High use of labor, inputs, and irrigation.
- Biochemical Inputs and Irrigation:
- Use of fertilizers, pesticides, modern techniques.
- Aims to increase production yields.
- Challenges with Land Inheritance:
- Division of land among generations.
- Leads to smaller, uneconomical land holdings.
- Farmers strive to maximize output on limited land.
- Pressure on Agricultural Land:
- Limited alternative livelihood sources.
- High demand for agricultural produce.
- Land becomes a valuable and pressured resource.
- Sustainability Concerns:
- Environmental impact due to intensive inputs.
- Soil degradation, water depletion.
Intensive and Commercial Farming Methods
- Characteristics of Intensive Farming:
- Relies on modern inputs for higher yields.
- High yielding variety (HYV) seeds, fertilizers, pesticides.
- Aims for increased productivity.
- Degree of Commercialization Varies:
- Varies regionally.
- Example: Rice – commercial in Haryana and Punjab, subsistence in Odisha.
- Plantation Farming:
- Focuses on single crops on large areas.
- Agriculture and industry interface.
- Capital-intensive, uses migrant labor.
- Produce serves as raw material for industries.
- Important Plantation Crops in India:
- Tea, Coffee, Rubber, Sugarcane, Banana.
- Tea in Assam, North Bengal; Coffee in Karnataka.
- Role of Transport and Communication:
- Well-developed network connecting plantations, industries, markets.
- Key role in plantation development.
Agricultural Diversity and Cropping Seasons in India
- Diverse Agricultural Practices:
- Reflects India’s physical diversity and cultural richness.
- Variety of crops grown – food, fiber, spices, fruits.
- Cropping patterns vary across regions.
- Cropping Seasons in India:
- Rabi Season (Winter):
- Sown: October to December.
- Harvested: April to June.
- Crops: Wheat, barley, peas, gram, mustard.
- Dominant in northern and north-western states.
- Green Revolution Impact:
- Punjab, Haryana, western UP, parts of Rajasthan.
- Contributed to rabi crop success.
- Kharif Season (Monsoon):
- Sown: With monsoon onset.
- Harvested: September-October.
- Crops: Paddy, maize, jowar, bajra, tur, cotton, etc.
- Significant rice-growing regions across India.
- Zaid Season (Summer):
- Between rabi and kharif.
- Crops: Watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, vegetables, fodder.
- Special Mention: Sugarcane:
- Takes about a year to grow.
- Significant agricultural product.
Crop Diversity and Major Crops in India
- Crop Variety based on Soil and Climate:
- Diverse crops grown due to varying conditions.
- Major crops include rice, wheat, millets, pulses, tea, coffee, sugarcane, oilseeds, cotton, jute, etc.
- Rice – Staple Food Crop:
- Second-largest rice producer globally (after China).
- Kharif crop requiring high temperature, humidity, and rainfall.
- Grown in plains of north, north-east, coastal, and deltaic regions.
- Canal irrigation, tubewells expand cultivation to less rainy areas.
- Wheat – Key Cereal Crop:
- Important rabi crop in north and north-west.
- Requires cool growing season, bright sunshine at ripening.
- Grown in Ganga-Satluj plains, black soil Deccan region.
- Significant in Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan.
- Millets – Nutrient-Rich Grains:
- Jowar, bajra, ragi are important millets.
- High nutritional value, rich in micro-nutrients.
- Jowar – rain-fed, grown in moist areas.
- Bajra – sandy soils, shallow black soil.
- Ragi – dry regions, various soil types.
- Maize – Food and Fodder Crop:
- Kharif crop with wide usage as food and fodder.
- Grows in temperature range 21°C to 27°C.
- HYV seeds, fertilizers, irrigation boost production.
- Key states: Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana.
- Pulses – Protein Source:
- India’s largest producer and consumer of pulses.
- Major source of protein in vegetarian diet.
- Tur, urad, moong, masur, peas, gram grown.
- Pulses restore soil fertility due to nitrogen fixation.
- Major states: Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka.
Diversity of Crops: Food, Fiber, and Non-Food
- Sugarcane – Sweet Crop of Warm Regions:
- Tropical and subtropical crop.
- Thrives in hot, humid climates (21°C – 27°C).
- Second-largest producer globally after Brazil.
- Source of sugar, gur, khandsari, molasses.
- Key states: Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Bihar, Punjab, Haryana.
- Oilseeds – Essential Cooking Ingredients:
- Groundnut, mustard, coconut, sesame, soybean, castor, cotton, linseed, sunflower.
- Edible and industrial usage.
- Groundnut major kharif crop; Gujarat, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu leaders.
- Linseed, mustard rabi crops.
- Sesame kharif in north, rabi in south.
- Castor in both rabi and kharif seasons.
- Tea and Coffee – Beverage Crops:
- Tea: Tropical and sub-tropical climates.
- High rainfall, warm climate, labor-intensive.
- Major states: Assam, Darjeeling, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Meghalaya, Andhra Pradesh, Tripura.
- Coffee: Arabica variety, Nilgiri region.
- Horticulture Crops – Fruit and Vegetable Diversity:
- India second-largest producer of fruits and vegetables.
- Wide range of tropical and temperate fruits.
- Mangoes, oranges, bananas, lichi, guava, pineapples, grapes, apples, pears, apricots, walnuts, etc.
- Rubber – Equatorial and Tropical Crop:
- Requires moist, humid climate with high rainfall.
- Key states: Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andaman and Nicobar, Meghalaya.
- Fiber Crops – Cotton and Jute:
- Cotton: Main material for textile industry.
- Thrives in dry areas, Deccan plateau.
- High temperature, light rainfall or irrigation.
- Major states: Maharashtra, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh.
- Jute: Known as golden fiber.
- Flood plains, well-drained fertile soils.
- West Bengal, Bihar, Assam, Odisha, Meghalaya.
- Used in various products.
Agricultural Reforms and Challenges in India
- Historical Agricultural Practices:
- Agriculture practiced for thousands of years.
- Sustained practices without compatible changes hindered development.
- Dependence on monsoon and natural fertility poses challenges.
- Need for Technical and Institutional Reforms:
- Majority of population reliant on agriculture.
- Challenges posed by growing population.
- Collectivization, consolidation of holdings, cooperative reforms introduced.
- Land Reforms and Institutional Changes:
- Focus on land reform during First Five Year Plan.
- Fragmentation of land holdings necessitated consolidation.
- Laws enacted, implementation varied.
- Green Revolution and White Revolution:
- 1960s and 1970s: Initiatives for agricultural improvement.
- Green Revolution based on package technology.
- White Revolution (Operation Flood) for dairy development.
- Led to concentrated development in select areas.
- Comprehensive Land Development Program:
- 1980s and 1990s: Institutional and technical reforms.
- Crop insurance, Grameen banks, cooperative societies.
- Kisan Credit Card (KCC), Personal Accident Insurance Scheme (PAIS) introduced.
- Weather bulletins and agricultural programs on radio and television.
- Government Initiatives for Farmers:
- Minimum support price, remunerative prices.
- Procurement prices to counter exploitation by speculators.
- Steps to ensure fair income for farmers.
Vinoba Bhave and the Bhoodan-Gramdan Movement
- Vinoba Bhave: Gandhi’s Spiritual Heir:
- Mahatma Gandhi’s chosen successor.
- Active in Satyagraha and advocate of gram swarajya (village self-rule).
- Carried forward Gandhiji’s ideals after his martyrdom.
- Padyatra for Spreading Gandhi’s Message:
- Undertook padyatra (foot march) across India.
- Aimed to spread Gandhiji’s teachings.
- Landless Villagers’ Demand and Bhoodan:
- Pochampalli, Andhra Pradesh: Landless villagers demanded land for economic well-being.
- Vinoba couldn’t promise immediate land but suggested cooperative farming.
- Shri Ram Chandra Reddy offered 80 acres of land for 80 landless villagers.
- Bhoodan and Gramdan Movement:
- Bhoodan: Act of donating land to the landless.
- Gramdan: Zamindars donating villages to the landless.
- Fear of land ceiling act led some landowners to donate land.
- Blood-less Revolution: Peaceful movement to redistribute land.
- Impact and Legacy:
- Bhoodan-Gramdan movement spread nationwide.
- Benefitted landless and poor farmers.
- Addressed land inequality issues.
- Vinoba Bhave’s efforts continued Gandhiji’s philosophy.