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A cultivator (also known as a rotavator) is a piece of agricultural equipment used for secondary tillage. One sense of the name refers to frames with teeth (also called shanks ) that pierce the soil as they are dragged through it linearly .
Shifting cultivation is an agricultural system in which plots of land are cultivated temporarily, then abandoned while post-disturbance fallow vegetation is allowed to freely grow while the cultivator moves on to another plot. The period of cultivation is usually terminated when the soil shows signs of exhaustion or, more commonly, when the ...
The Cultivation System (Dutch: cultuurstelsel) was a Dutch government policy from 1830–1870 for its Dutch East Indies colony (now Indonesia). Requiring a portion of agricultural production to be devoted to export crops, it is referred to by Indonesian historians as tanam paksa ("enforced planting").
Started the business in 1953. Quick Tractor, located in Yogyakarta, is the most prominent manufacturer of two wheel tractor in Indonesia. With 120.000 units production capacity annually, Quick Tractor covers more than 70% of national demand, making it the top selling brand in Indonesia. It operates 2 factories, both in Yogyakarta.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Cultivators
A cultivar is a kind of cultivated plant that people have selected for desired traits and which retains those traits when propagated.Methods used to propagate cultivars include division, root and stem cuttings, offsets, grafting, tissue culture, or carefully controlled seed production.
In Indonesia, seaweed farms account for 40 percent of the national fisheries output and employ about one million people. [ 6 ] The Safe Seaweed Coalition is a research and industry group that promotes seaweed cultivation.
Attempts have been made to create lists of synonyms. In 2000, Valmayor et al. listed equivalent local names for 68 cultivars across five Southeast Asian countries (the Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam), together with their internationally used names. They considered a further 81 cultivars to be unique to one country. [1]