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Agroforestry

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A coffee plantation growing under shade trees in the Sierra Norte region of Puebla, Mexico.

Agroforestry is a way of using land that mixes growing trees with crops or animals. It combines ideas from farming and caring for forests. In agroforestry, people can grow wood for building, fruits, nuts, mushrooms, medicine, and pretty plants, as well as raise animals.

Maize grown under Faidherbia albida and Borassus akeassii near Banfora, Burkina Faso

People use agroforestry because it helps in many ways. It can make farms more productive, keep the environment healthy, and help farmers feel safer from problems. Agroforestry can also make farms more beautiful, increase profits, stop soil from washing away, give homes to wild animals, reduce pollution, and help the soil stay strong.

This way of farming is common in warm places, especially in parts of Africa where families grow food on small pieces of land. Because it has many good points, such as helping plants get nutrients and dealing with dry times, places like the United States and Europe have started using it too.

Definition

Agroforestry is a way of farming that mixes trees with crops or animals on the same land. It helps plants and animals help each other, just like in a natural forest. This method can use many different plants and animals, keeping the land healthy and producing more food.

Ecology is the study of how plants, animals, and their environment work together. It helps us learn how to care for our world. When we use ecology in farming, called agroecology, we grow food in ways that are good for the earth and for people. This means farming that is healthy for nature and communities, not just for profit.

History and scientific study

The word "agroforestry" was first used in 1973 by a Canadian forester named John Bene, but the idea of combining trees with farming has been around for thousands of years. People have used trees and plants together in smart ways for a long time.

Many communities, especially those near forests, have used agroforestry for centuries. For example, some groups in California used fires to keep their forests healthy and help plants and animals. In parts of the world near the tropics, people have created "home gardens" with many different kinds of trees and crops growing together. These gardens can have many types of plants in a small space!

In 1929, a book called Tree Crops: A Permanent Agriculture suggested that farming could use more trees, especially on land that isn’t good for regular farming. By 2025, a lot of land in many countries was used for agroforestry, with most of it in Asia, especially in India and Indonesia.

Benefits

Agroforestry has many benefits. It can make farms more productive and profitable while helping the land. It protects soil from washing away and creates homes for animals. It helps keep the land healthy.

Agroforestry supports many different plants and animals by giving them places to live. It also helps keep soil in good condition and can reduce pollution in water. This way of farming can help meet our needs without harming the environment. It can even help us deal with changes in the weather. Trees can also help capture carbon from the air, which is good for the planet.

Tropical

See also: Applications of agroforestry

Trees in agroforestry can give us wood, fruits, nuts, and other helpful things. Agroforestry is very common in warm places, like small farms in sub-Saharan Africa.

Studies with a special tree called Faidherbia albida in Zambia showed that farmers can grow more maize when they plant these trees with their crops. With the right number of trees, they get more maize than farms without trees.

Hillside systems

Shade-grown coffee (Coffea arabica) in Sierra Norte of Puebla

One famous agroforestry system is in the Lempira Department of Honduras. This place used to have farming ways that hurt the soil. Heavy rains would wash away the soil, leaving it dry and useless. People had to move their farms often. With help from experts, a new system was made:

  1. Thin and prune small forests on hillsides, keeping trees that help the soil.
  2. Plant maize, a common local crop.
  3. After harvesting, plant beans. The maize stalks help the beans grow.
  4. Plant pumpkins to give extra shade and keep moisture in the soil.
  5. Every few seasons, let cattle graze to add nutrients to the soil.
  6. Repeat these steps.

Kuojtakiloyan

The kuojtakiloyan of Mexico is a special way to grow many plants together in a jungle-like place. It includes avocadoes, sweet potatoes, cinnamon, black cherries, and many other useful plants. This system helps give food, medicine, and other things while taking care of the environment. It comes from the knowledge of local people and helps keep nature balanced.

Kuojtakiloyan

Kuojtakiloyan means 'useful forest'. It is used by people in the Sierra Norte of the State of Puebla, Mexico. This system grows many plants together, such as avocados, sweet potatoes, cinnamon, black cherries, and citrus fruits. It also includes wild mushrooms and herbs. Some plants are grown for their fibers or to make structures. Coffee is often grown in the shade of these trees, which helps the coffee grow better. Bees are also encouraged because they help plants grow and give honey and other things.

Shade crops

Some crops are grown under the shade of trees. This protects the crops and can make them better. For example, shade-grown coffee tastes better and needs less weeding. In places like Sumatra, coffee is grown together with durian and papaya to help protect natural areas.

Alley cropping

A temperate Syntropic system in Dordogne France, including heavily mulched sunflower plants

Main article: Alley cropping

In alley cropping, rows of crops are planted between rows of trees or bushes. The trees are often cut before planting crops, and their leaves are spread to give nutrients to the soil. The trees also protect the crops from wind and help stop soil erosion. In tropical parts of North and South America, special trees like Inga are used for this purpose.

Syntropic systems

Syntropic agroforestry is an organic farming way made in Brazil. It tries to copy how natural forests work to create useful lands that give food, help the environment, and provide other forest things. This system uses dense planting, quick cutting of fast-growing plants to add nutrients, and ways to keep more water in the soil. It started in tropical Brazil but has been tried in other places to help soil and ecosystems.

The main ideas of syntropic systems include better water absorption in soil, higher productivity on tough land, and more balanced soil temperatures.

Temperate

Agroforestry mixes trees with farming. It is helpful in many places, like the US and Europe. It can keep soil healthy and help during dry times.

The United States Department of Agriculture says there are five ways to use agroforestry in cooler areas. These are alley cropping, forest farming, riparian forest buffers, silvopasture, and windbreaks.

Alley cropping corn fields between rows of walnut trees

Alley cropping

Alley cropping works well in cooler places. Trees are planted in rows between crops. This gives nutrients to the crops and protects them from strong winds and soil loss.

Forest farming

Forest farming grows valuable plants under trees. This is also called multi-story cropping. It needs some care, but it lets people grow many useful plants together.

A riparian buffer bordering a river in Iowa

Riparian forest buffers

Riparian buffers are strips of plants along rivers or ditches. They help keep dirt and nutrients out of the water.

Silvopasture

Silvopasture over the years (Australia)

In silvopasture, animals like cows, goats, or sheep eat grass that grows under trees. This helps both the animals and the trees.

The dehesa or montado system in Spain and Portugal is a good example, where pigs and bulls live in large areas.

Windbreaks

Windbreaks are rows of trees that block strong winds. This helps crops grow better by keeping them from drying out or being blown over.

Urban

Urban agroforestry uses agroforestry ideas in cities and nearby places. It means growing trees, bushes, and crops together in spots like backyards, parks, and streets to produce food and other helpful items.

The UN says that urban agroforestry can help cities in many ways. It can make cities cooler in hot weather by giving shade and releasing cool air. It also helps keep air clean and manage water better. These green spaces can give people fresh food, help wildlife, and create places for people to relax and learn about nature. However, starting urban agroforestry can be hard because it costs money and needs care for many years. Cities also face challenges like hot temperatures, dirty soils, and limited space for these projects.

Forest gardening

Forest gardening is a simple way to grow food. It mixes fruit and nut trees, shrubs, herbs, vines, and vegetables together in layers, like a small forest. People have used this method for thousands of years, especially in warm places. In the 1980s, a man named Robert Hart showed that it can work in cooler climates too.

Robert Hart's forest garden in Shropshire

Forest gardens are common in tropical areas and places like south India, Indonesia, and Mexico. These gardens grow many different plants together. This helps keep the soil healthy and provides lots of food and useful things. Some people even compare forest gardens to the Garden of Eden because they are full of life and growth.

Robert Hart, forest gardening pioneer

The Agroforestry Research Trust does experiments with forest gardens in the United Kingdom. They show that this way of growing food needs less work and helps the environment. Other people, like Ken Fern, have made lists of plants that grow well together in these gardens. Books and films about forest gardening have been written by people who love this way of growing food.

Many places around the world have forest garden projects. For example, there is one on the border of Belize and Guatemala. In the United States, there is a big food forest in Seattle, Washington. In Canada, people in British Columbia and Ontario have started forest gardens. In the United Kingdom, there are projects in Wales. In Spain, near Barcelona, people are testing small forest gardens to learn more about them.

Forest farming

Forest farming is growing special crops, like plants and fungi, under trees. The trees give shade and help the crops grow. Forest farming is a type of agroforestry, which means mixing trees with farming. It is done in a careful and smart way.

People have used forest farming for a long time. They have eaten fruits, nuts, and leaves from trees and bushes for years. In 1929, a teacher named J. Russell Smith wrote a book about how trees could help give food for animals and help the environment. A person named Toyohiko Kagawa in Japan started growing crops under trees in the 1930s. He planted trees that gave food for animals and sold the animals for money. Later, people around the world started doing the same thing.

Toyohiko Kagawa, forest farming pioneer

Forest farming can help the soil, water, and land. It can also give people food and wood. Today, people often focus on growing plants under the trees instead of animals.

Permaculture is a way of managing land to help nature. It started in the 1970s in Australia. Permaculture uses nature’s ways to grow food. One part of permaculture is the food forest, where different layers of plants grow together to make a garden that feeds people. Food forests can be in many places and are good for the environment.

For thousands of years, Indigenous peoples have used smart farming ways. For example, the Maya people grew crops together so they help each other. Today, many people are using these old ways again to help the planet and grow food in cities too.

Images

A beautiful pear orchard located on Elverland Farm in Kent, England.
A diagram showing the different layers of plants in a forest garden, helping us learn about sustainable growing methods.
A beautiful garden at the château de La Bussière in France, filled with plants and greenery.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Agroforestry, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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