Shifting cultivation is also known as swidden/slash-and-burn/dry cultivation. The process in brief is as follows:
- The land is rain-fed and the natural vegetation is slashed, dried, and then burnt. The clear land is known as 'swidden'. The basic technology of shifting cultivation, also known as dry cultivation, is to grow crops without the help of irrigation or external input of fertilizers.
- The topsoil is then mixed with the layer of ash that provides the necessary compounds to act as fertilizers.
Photo by Maksym Ivashchenko on Unsplash - Cultivation of the land after clearing is usually accomplished by hoe and a digging stick and not by a plough.
- After the field is cultivated, it is left to fallow till there is sufficient growth of vegetation after the soil regains its fertility - to commence another cycle of cultivation. The fallow period has to be very long, 10-15 years, for the system to be reasonably productive, therefore it is also known as extensive cultivation.
This technique is adopted by different tribal communities in many parts of the Indian subcontinent. It is known by different names in tribal regions.
- Jhum - NorthEast India
- Podu / Koman / Bringa - Orissa
- Deppa - Bastar
- Kumari - Western Ghats
- Penda - SouthEast Rajasthan
- Bewar - Madhya Pradesh
It is also prevalent in other parts of the World.
- Milpa - Central America and Mexico
- Ladang - Indonesia and Malaysia
etc.
An important feature of this agricultural system is that it can be productive even in poor soil conditions, for example on mountains; as it makes its own top soil and doesn't go deep in the earth. However, this method is not suitable in a community with high population density.
Reference: collected from various sources