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Original Articles

Agroecology of Tropical Underground Crops for Small-Scale Agriculture

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Pages 213-238 | Published online: 30 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

The important tropical root and tuberous crops cassava (Manihot esculenta), sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas), yams (Dioscorea spp.), and the aroids (especially Xanthosoma and Colocasia spp.) represent an important source of relatively inexpensive carbohydrates to large sectors of the population in tropical areas. One or more tropical root crops are normally a staple in rural communities and are typically grown on small-scale subsistence farms. The current status of the agroecology research on these crops, including productivity under polyculture systems, resource (water, nutrients, light, space) utilization, tolerance to environmental stress, pest dynamics response to habitat manipulation, and alternative cultural practices, is reviewed in this paper as they relate to the performance of these crops in small-scale tropical agricultural systems. The development of technological recommendations to improve the productivity of tropical root crops in the tropics is dependent on an understanding of important underlying agroecological principles. The objective of background ecophysiological work is to develop crop-specific technological packages appropriate to low-input subsistence farming, and to match specific crops with a cropping system that will result in adequate yields and in ecological and socioeconomical sustainability. Because of the close relationship between crops and humans in small-scale farms of the tropics, it is imperative that agroecology research be holistic, multidisciplinary, and cognizant of the many socioeconomic and cultural factors that will determine whether improved technologies will be adopted in any given location.

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