- the
second section grew
crops such as one of the legumes,
namely peas, lentils, or beans; and the
third field was left
fallow. The
three fields were rotated...
- a
fallow period.
Crops such as corn that are
prone to
fallow syndrome should not
follow a
period of
fallow, but
instead should follow a
cover crop which...
- The
European fallow deer (Dama dama), also
known as the
common fallow deer or
simply fallow deer, is a
species of deer
native to Eurasia. It is historically...
-
Melilotus officinalis (yellow sweetclover) as a
cover crop in an
improved fallow system (where a
fallow period is
intentionally improved by any
number of...
-
field fallow.
Normally from 10% to 30% of the
arable land in a
three crop rotation system is
fallow. Each
field was
rotated into a
different crop nearly...
-
exhaustion and need to lie
fallow. In
shifting agriculture,
after two or
three years of
producing vegetable and
grain crops on
cleared land, the migrants...
- manure,
compost and minerals.
Crop nutrient use may also be
managed using cultural techniques such as
crop rotation or a
fallow period.
Manure is used either...
- a
regime of
crop rotation in
which a
field is
planted with one set of
crops one year, a
different set in the
second year, and left
fallow in the third...
- Some of the
fixed nitrogen becomes available to
later crops, so
legumes play a key role in
crop rotation. The term pulse, as used by the
United Nations'...
- daikon. In
North America, it is
primarily grown not for food but as a
fallow crop, with the
roots left
unharvested to
prevent soil compaction; the leaves...