Agriculture
Agriculture
Agriculture
• Apricot (4th)
• Cotton (4th)
• Sugarcane (4th)
• Milk (5th)
• Onion (5th)
• Date Palm (6th)
• Mango (7th)
• Oranges (8th)
• Rice (8th)
• Wheat (9th)
Pakistan ranks fifth in the Muslim world and twentieth worldwide in farm output.
Crops
The most important crops are wheat, sugarcane, cotton, and rice, which together
account for more than 75% of the value of total crop output.
Pakistan is a net food exporter, except in occasional years when its harvest is
adversely affected by droughts. Pakistan exports rice, cotton, fish, fruits (especially
Oranges and Mangoes), and vegetables and imports vegetable oil, wheat, cotton,
pulses and consumer foods. The country is Asia's largest camel market, second-
largest apricot and ghee market and third-largest cotton, onion and milk market.
Livestock
Pageof1 Pakistan,
According to the Economic Survey of 14 the livestock sector contributes nearly
11 per cent of Pakistan's GDP.
KEY POINTS:
What is agriculture?
• The factors of nature that affect the possibilities for different crops and
animals .e.g. Land, Soil, climate, water.
Types of farming:
MAIN CROPS:
I: wheat:
Cultivation of wheat:
• In Oct. — December, after plowing the field, wheat seeds are sown directly
into the ground.
• Wheat does not need a lot of water.
• Farmers irrigate the land twice, the first irrigation is done one month after
sowing and the second is done one irrigation takes place one month before
harvesting.
• Wheat is harvested after three months.
• Chaff is separated from the grain; the grain is then stored by the farmer for
the use of his family or transported to the market.
Page 3 of 14
Growing wheat production:
• The yield of wheat has gradually increased in Pakistan with the introduction of new wheat
varieties and improved farming methods.
• There is improvement in the water management system to cut down water
losses from the canals to the fields.
• Chemical fertilizers are becoming more widely used.
• Government is providing loans on easy installments to purchase tractors etc.
• But Pakistan is rarely self –sufficient in wheat because of ever increasing
population and gradual decrease in cultivable area due to water logging and
salinity.
• Maxi pak is one of the most widely used varieties sin Pakistan.
2: RICE:
• Rice is grown on a large scale for commercial purposes in Punjab and Sindh.
• In the northern hilly regions small scale subsistence rice farming is practiced.
• Rice seeds are initially sown into beds or nurseries.
• When the plant is about 9 inches high, it is transplanted into the prepared
fields which have flooded to a depth of 30 -37 cm.
• The rice fields are kept Page
full of4water
of 14until the rice is ripe.
• Threshing of rice is either done by draft animals or by a mechanical thresher.
• After threshing, rice is taken to the rice mills for polishing and packing.
• Rice husks are used for making cardboard or covering roofs of houses after
mixing it with mud and water.
• Use of Irri Pak variety has
doubled the production of
rice.
• Export of basmati Rice has
increased over the years.
Page 5 of 14
3: COTTON:
• Cotton the king of fiber is the most widely used textile fiber.
• Used in making cloths, furnishing fabrics, bed linen.
• It is a kharif crop.
• Cotton seeds are sown at a distance apart of 30 cm to 45 cm in April – May.
• One month later the fields are irrigated.
• A second irrigation takes place after a further two months.
• Cotton bolls ripen in the dry months of October and November.
• The plant reaches a height of up to 135cm to 150 cm.
• After picking cotton bolls are loaded onto trucks immediately and transported
to ginning mill where the seeds are separated from the lint (fluffy mass of
fibers inside the cotton boll).
• Cotton seeds are used as animal feed and for the extraction of oil.
• Cotton lint is tied up in bales.
Page 6 of 14
•
Varieties of cotton:
Page 7 of 14
4: SUGAR CANE:
6: PULSES:
• Pulses are rich in proteins and are popular in the local diet.
• Pulses fix nitrogen in the soil therefore helping to fertilize the crop that
follows.
• Pulses are considered as low value crops because the cash returns are low
and consequently inputs are minimal.
• Important pulses are Mung, Mash, Grams, Masoor.
7: MILLETS:
8: OIL SEEDS:
• Oil seeds like sunflower, soya bean, rape seed, mustard, sarson, rai, linseed
are used to extract edible oil.
• The production of oilseeds is not sufficient to cater for the needs of the
growing population.
• 68 % edible oil is being imported.
9: TOBACCO:
Page 9
• Tobacco is grown mainly in NWFP (mardan peshwar), which accounts for
about 65 % of the total production.
(i) Nomadic:
(ii) Transhumance:
Page 10
• Subsistence livestock farming is also practiced in the villages of Punjab and
Sindh.
• Cows and hens are kept for milk and eggs to be continued by the family.
• Excess milk is processed to make butter or ghee.
INPUTS:
• Natural grazing fields for fodder
• Water from ponds and lakes
• Open land
• Labor women and children of the family.
PROCESS:
• Natural breeding
• Feeding
• Milking manually
• Slaughtering
• Shearing wool from sheep.
OUTPUTS:
• Milk
• Meat
• Wool
• eggs
Page 11
Main Livestock Resources:
(i) Cattle
• Bullock
• Cow
• Camels
• Mules
(ii) Buffaloes
• Nili bar
• Kundi
• Ravi
(iv) Poultry
• Chicken (egg)
Page 12
How the use of chemicals affect the environment:
Page 13
Geography Handouts compiled by USMAN HAMEED 03224557967 Page 14