Weed control systems for upland rice production

Nearly one-quarter of the total rice area of the world is planted to upland rice (10). At least two-thirds of the production in Latin America and West Africa is from upland culture (3, 36). Probably 30-40 percent of the rice in the world is grown following dry soil preparation (23~. Much of the upla...

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Autor principal: Moody, K.
Formato: Conference Proceedings
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1974
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175399
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author Moody, K.
author_browse Moody, K.
author_facet Moody, K.
author_sort Moody, K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Nearly one-quarter of the total rice area of the world is planted to upland rice (10). At least two-thirds of the production in Latin America and West Africa is from upland culture (3, 36). Probably 30-40 percent of the rice in the world is grown following dry soil preparation (23~. Much of the upland rice in West Africa is grown on small farms under shifting cultivation. With this system, the farmer clears the underbrush towards the end of the dry season leaving the large trees of economic value intact (18). Generally the stumps and roots from~ hich the forest regenerates are left in the ground (13). The underbrush is allowed to dry and is then burnt. After the commencement of the rains, the farmer sows his crop of rice which may be mixed with other crop seeds using a hoe with which he scratches the surface soil to cover the seeds (18). Farms rarely exceed 1 hectare in size mainly~ because the farmer is unable to weed a larger area.
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spelling CGSpace1753992025-12-08T10:06:44Z Weed control systems for upland rice production Moody, K. upland rice weed control weeding farmers crops rice Nearly one-quarter of the total rice area of the world is planted to upland rice (10). At least two-thirds of the production in Latin America and West Africa is from upland culture (3, 36). Probably 30-40 percent of the rice in the world is grown following dry soil preparation (23~. Much of the upland rice in West Africa is grown on small farms under shifting cultivation. With this system, the farmer clears the underbrush towards the end of the dry season leaving the large trees of economic value intact (18). Generally the stumps and roots from~ hich the forest regenerates are left in the ground (13). The underbrush is allowed to dry and is then burnt. After the commencement of the rains, the farmer sows his crop of rice which may be mixed with other crop seeds using a hoe with which he scratches the surface soil to cover the seeds (18). Farms rarely exceed 1 hectare in size mainly~ because the farmer is unable to weed a larger area. 1974 2025-06-30T13:06:00Z 2025-06-30T13:06:00Z Conference Proceedings https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175399 en Limited Access application/pdf Moody, K. (1975). Weed control systems for upland rice production. In Report on the expert consultation meeting on the mechanization of rice production. Laguna, Philippines: IRRI, (pp. 71-78).
spellingShingle upland rice
weed control
weeding
farmers
crops
rice
Moody, K.
Weed control systems for upland rice production
title Weed control systems for upland rice production
title_full Weed control systems for upland rice production
title_fullStr Weed control systems for upland rice production
title_full_unstemmed Weed control systems for upland rice production
title_short Weed control systems for upland rice production
title_sort weed control systems for upland rice production
topic upland rice
weed control
weeding
farmers
crops
rice
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175399
work_keys_str_mv AT moodyk weedcontrolsystemsforuplandriceproduction