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Taro irrigation techniques in the Pacific

Spriggs Matthew. 1984. .
Taro irrigation techniques in the Pacific
ARTICLE, (1984 ) - PUBLISHEDVERSION - English (en-GB)

OPENACCESS - .
Audience : RESEARCHERS
Clarendon Press
Subject
Colocasia esculenta, irrigation
Domains
Archéologie
Description

Three main categories of taro irrigation can be recognized in the Pacific: true irrigation, swampland, and pit cultivation. True irrigation refers to diversions of water from source to fields. swampland cultivation techniques generally consist of management by ditching of freshwater swamps. Pit cultivation is found mainly on atolls where pits are dug to tap the freshwater lens beneath the ground surface. True irrigation subsumes several different methods -pondfield (paddy) irrigation, simple floodings, island beds, and furrow irrigation. Labour inputs, yields, cropping cycles of the different techniques are discussed based on research in Vanuatu and New Caledonia from 1978 to 1980 and on published sources. The need of more detailed research on traditional irrigation techniques used in the Pacific is stressed, particularly in assessment of yields and the conditions allowing sustained production. (Résumé de l'auteur).

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Language
English (en-GB)
Creators
Spriggs Matthew
Contributors
Sources
Coverage
Pacific
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