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Q: Is monoculture better than poly-culture
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What is the antonym for monoculture?

polyculture permaculture


What are the advantages and disadvantages of monocultures?

The advantage of a monoculture is that it allows huge amounts of food to be produced for our ever increasing population, and to be provided at affordable prices. This modern farming technique has also allowed farmers to greatly increase their profits, a far cry from the subsidence farming of the past. Farmers are now able to use the same plot of land but produce almost 100% more produce. Additionally, crops grown as a monoculture experience little competition for nutrients, sunlight and space from other species. A monoculture, also allows standardisation of planting, maintaining and harvesting of crops, which reduces waste and loss due to inefficiency. There are advantages and disadvantages to both monoculture and polyculture farming systems. Monoculture is mainly used in industrialized agriculture with many inputs of fossil fuels and chemicals to produce large amounts of a single crop. Polyculture is often locally based, and may be found more in a subsistence agricultural practice that uses human and animal energy to produce smaller amounts of many different crops. Industrialized farms produce much of the food of international commerce; however, they are also more vulnerable to disease and pest problems. Monoculture reduces ecosystem diversity, and so more soil and pest problems result, which in turn causes farmers to apply more chemical fertilizers and pesticides to their land. These practices ultimately pollute the land, the water, and the food they are producing. Subsistence farmers may produce lower yields of each individual crop, but in the long run they are much less vulnerable to disasters. Since subsistence farming is more diversified and on a smaller scale, the authors argue that it is less vulnerable to natural disasters. Therefore, subsistence farming is more sustainable on the land, in the social system, and economically. Diversity is the key to polyculture. Diversity provides pest management, nutrient cycling, a greater variety of resource use, yield increases, production of diverse foods, and a decrease in the risk of loss due to diseases. The problem with polyculture is that it leads to difficulty with the mechanization of planting, weed control, and harvesting. Additionally, farmers really need to understand how their crops function ecologically in order for it to be successful, monoculture allows for large machines to aid in the mechanization of planting, weed control, and harvesting, and less knowledge about the actual plants is needed for it to work. There are many different types of polyculture such as intercropping, which is growing more than one crop in the same field; agroforestry, which incorporates crops in with the forest; relay cropping, which is planting a crop among the already existing crop; and rotation; which is the practice of changing crops that are planted in the field from planting to planting. There are also cover crops, which are plants that are not harvested but are planted to help the soil instead of leaving the soil barren; and shifting cultivation or slash-and-burn agriculture, which is burning the existing plants and leaving the ash on the land to help fertilize the soil. Polyculture is sustainable because it recycles and reuses all of its resources in order to be as efficient as possible with its resources. Monoculture practices can incorporate multiple cropping systems by using rotations, borders, and cover crops. If multiple cropping is practiced correctly it will actually lead to higher yields than monoculture because of more complete use of resources. Monoculture can provide huge yields. Polyculture can also produce high yields and improve nutrient cycling, provide better pest management and resource use, and avoid vulnerability to widespread catastrophes of crop losses.


Would a monoculture forest have more wildlife than one with biodiversity?

No.


What are some words that end in culture?

sericulture, ostreiculture, stirpiculture, pomiculture, zooculture, horticulture, arboriculture, silviculture, sericiculture, counterculture, pisciculture, polyculture, viniculture, sylviculture, aquaculture, permaculture, subculture, electroculture, vermiculture, floriculture, aviculture, viticulture, agriculture, coculture, aquiculture, monoculture, mariculture, apiculture


What is polyculture?

Polyculture is a farming practice where multiple crops or species are grown together in the same space. This method promotes biodiversity, reduces the risk of crop failure, and can improve soil health by utilizing complementary plant interactions. It can also help to mimic natural ecosystems and reduce the need for chemical inputs.


What does the term Mediterranean polyculture in regards to?

Latin roots say that "poly" means many. Naturally, polyculture means many cultures, and in the Mediterranean....I really do not know, it is just a guess


How does disease spread so easily in a monoculture?

ask naylor he is a scientist but Morris is better as he is a practitioner of FTSE


What is a monoculture farm?

A monoculture farm is one which cultivates a single crop.


Does monoculture exist?

*monocluture.


What is global monoculture?

Global monoculture is the movement of the entire earth to becoming a single culture. This is likely a Westernized culture.


Why are big fields with animal grazing not and crops not good for bees?

This is not entirely true. Crop lands are far less good for bees than these "big fields with animal grazing" or rather grazing lands or grasslands with lots of forbs and grasses available for bees to pollinate. A vast majority of croplands are grown with pesticides that harm bees, much more so than the lands used for grazing livestock. These lands are made up of a polyculture of vegetation, unlike croplands, which are largely monoculture. This vegetation is made up of tame and/or native grasses, forbs (herbaceous broad-leaved plants), and shrubs, giving that much more opportunity for bees and other pollinators to gather nectar and spread pollen.Thus, croplands are actually a more significant threat for bees than land where livestock are grazed, primarily because there is less opportunity for bees to find flowers to pollinate. Canola provides some opportunity, as well as some other flowering crops like flax, turnips, radish, field peas, etc. But as mentioned, these are predominantly monoculture crops, not polyculture like pasture and native grasslands are.


Cultivation of a single crop?

Monoculture