Yes, especially along the southern states of Guerrero, Oaxaca and Chiapas.
Both. There are large-scale, mechanized farming operations as well as subsistence farming in communal land known as ejidos.
Quite the opposite: northern Mexico has small but very sophisticated farming operations.
what are the influences of subsistence farming
Subsistence farming can be found throughout all of Mexico. However, incidences of this are less common in northern Mexico, due to two factors:Northern Mexico is dominated by the Sonoran and Chihuahuan deserts, so agriculture is less important than other economic activities; as subsistence farming depends on rain and little to no fertilizers, it cannot be done efficiently on such climate.Most agriculture in northern Mexico follows the agribusiness economic model, so most farms are owned or leased to agribusiness corporations and are dedicated to "cash crops", such as cotton, citric fruits and wheat.
a non-example of subsistence farming is farming companies
describe and explain fully subsistence farming
subsistence
Subsistence farming is when the farmer provides enough food for himself and his family. This form of farming is present on all continents (with the exception of Antarctic) on either a large or small scale.
Subsistence farming is farming where there is little or no surplus for the farmer after he and his family are fed. This was a common method of farming in preindustrial societies.
The same way other countries do. The main difference lays in crop, type of farm and climate where farming takes place. Mexico is a land of great contrasts, having a mix of modern and obsolete farming techinques. For example, you can find large, automatized cash crop operations in western Mexico, while at the same time you can find subsistence farming in the southern, coastal regions.
Commercial farming.
The subsistence farming is practiced to fulfill the basic food requirements of farmer's family where as commercial farming include to earn more after selling the final products of cultivated crops.We can find subsistence farming pattern in remote and tribal areas where the economy level of farmers is very low as well as resources are very limited.
Both. There is mechanized agriculture as well as traditional, subsistence farming. This is one of the characteristics of a developing country, and Mexico is classified as such.
subsistence farming remains the main agriculture activity.