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draining nutrients from the soil It can also cause a catastrophic rise in soil-borne insect and disease problems.
soil exhastion
Panting the same crops for so many years had robbed the soil of its nutrients.
draining nutrients from the soil It can also cause a catastrophic rise in soil-borne insect and disease problems.
It's possible, but it does not have to be the case.Planting any land to row crops, year after year, requires good management or the quality of the soil will deteriorate. This is true of tobacco and many other crops. High value crops, like tobacco and cotton, are sometimes planted by poorly skilled farmers for a quick buck. So does the crop ruin the soil, or the poorly skilled grower?One type of management practice is the rotation of crops grown in the field. This means planting different crops in the field in different growing seasons, according to a set pattern. Rotations are done to replenish soil nutrients and soil quality, and also for disease and pest control.it just so happens that tobacco shares a number of pests with other crops, like peanuts and tomatoes, so in a way tobacco can temporarily "ruin" the soil for some crops.
draining nutrients from the soil It can also cause a catastrophic rise in soil-borne insect and disease problems.
draining nutrients from the soil It can also cause a catastrophic rise in soil-borne insect and disease problems.
draining nutrients from the soil It can also cause a catastrophic rise in soil-borne insect and disease problems.
soil exhastion
Panting the same crops for so many years had robbed the soil of its nutrients.
Panting the same crops for so many years had robbed the soil of its nutrients.
Agriculture, the planting, cultivating and harvesting of crops, started thousands of years before the industrial revolution.
draining nutrients from the soil It can also cause a catastrophic rise in soil-borne insect and disease problems.
draining nutrients from the soil It can also cause a catastrophic rise in soil-borne insect and disease problems.
By advancement I assume you mean economic success. Most years most farms just about break even. Some years they lose money and some years (1 in 10) they make very good money. Overall, it is a tough business so you have to love it to keep at it. Unless you have huge acreage and Congressmen you are paying to give you favorable payments (for planting or not planting various crops) from the Ag Department- then the odds shift in your favor.
Real Madrid have won 54 trophies over the years.
To raise more crops, planters have to to keep clearing new land. Crops such as tobacco ruin fertile soil in only a few years.