Production Practices
Production Practices
Production Practices
IN CROP
PRODUCTION
By: J. A. Osea
Two Possible Cases In Starting A Crop Production
Enterprise
1. Climate
a. Amount of rainfall
b. Frequency of typhoons
c. Wind velocity and direction
2. Physical factors
Land Preparation
Specifically:
1. to develop desirable soil structure
easy root development
improve the infiltration of water and
internal drainage
enhance the aeration of soil
2. to incorporate stubbles and weeds into the soil
control weeds
Primary and secondary tillage
a. Primary tillage (plowing) – includes hoeing,
spading or plowing
Purposes:
to cut or break the soil
partly pulverize the soil
incoporate weeds and stubbles
b. Secondary tillage (harrowing) – breaking the
soil into clods or granulation
(upland) or puddling (wetland)
Purposes:
pulverize the clods
level the field
compact the soil to certain degree
destroy growing weeds
Important Characteristics
of Good Seeds
1. Damage Free
2. Good germinating ability
3. Free from mixture with other varieties
4. Free from seed-borne diseases
Types of planting materials
1. Seeds – legumes and cereals
2. Vegetative parts – vines,
stems/stalks, tubers, modified
stems
Pre-germination Treatment
1. Seed treatment
2. Seed inoculation
Planting Methods
1. Direct seeding
- Broadcasting:
mungbean after rice
upland and lowland rice
- Drilling seeds in rows
- Hill method within rows
- Dibbling seeds of relay or intercrops
2. Transplanting
- rice, vegetables, and tobacco
- Seedlings are nursed before transplanted to the field
- Advantages
a) less wastage of valuable seed
b) seedlings are more properly cared for
c) transplanted crop stays for a shorter period of time
to allow for succession croppings
Planting methods for lowland rice
1. Transplanting
Methods
a. Broadcasting
b. Drilling pre-germinated seeds in rows
c. Dibbling: pre-germinated seeds are dibbled at
5 to 8 seeds/hill at
15 cm x 15 cm to 25 cm x 25 cm
3. Dryland seeding of lowland rice
Sowing methods:
Broadcasting in unfurrowed field
Broadcasting or drilling on fields with deeper
furrows
Broadcasting or directing in fields with shallow
furrows
Dibbling
Raising of Seedlings for vegetables
a. Seedbed method
- Fully exposed to sunlight
- Surface is sterilized by burning rice straw over or by
chemical sterilization (40% formaldehyde)
2. Furrow irrigation
- running water through furrows
- Ideal on vegetables, sugarcane, corn, cotton,
sorghum, and other field grains
3. Flooding
- ideal for areas with uniform/gentle slopes
4. Subirrigation
5. Drip Irrigation
- water supplied through small orifices or
emitters
- ideal to save water or where water is scarce
or has a high salt content.
Time of application
• Early vegetative
• Maximum tillering (rice)
• Panicle initiation (rice)
• Onset of fruiting (fruit trees/plantation crops)
• Early whorl (corn)
Organic Matter Maintenance
• Crop Rotation
• Cover cropping
• Proper tillage
Liming
Lime requirement
• refers to the quantity of lime needed to bring a soil to a
pH which is considered practical to the system of
cropping being followed.
Limestone
• main liming material used
Specialized Management Practices
1. Windbreaks or shelterbelts – rows of trees or shrubs that protect crops from strong
winds
2. Hardening – exposing young plants slowly to the outdoor environment
a. Intercropping – growing of two or more crops simultaneously on same field such that the
overlap period is long enough to include the vegetative stage.
b. Relay planting – second crop is planted before the harvest of the first. The overlap period is
shorter.
c. Sequential cropping – second crop is planted after the harvest of the first. There is a turn-
around-period before the next planting.
d. Sorjan cultivation – a system of crops cultivated in parallel beds and sinks wherein lowland
crops are planted in sinks and upland crops on beds.
Sorjan Cultivation
Agroforestry
Bio-Intensive Gardening
Principles of LEISA
optimize the use of locally available resources
combining the different components of the farm system such as
plants, animals, soil, water, climate and people
complementary and synergistic effects
if external inputs are used, maximum recycling and minimum
detrimental impact on the environment is given emphasis
thank you !!!