@inbook{611, keywords = {ecology, agriculture, tree crops, Indonesia, rice, crop rotation, intercropping, home gardens, trees, farming, agroforestry, upland farming, Java, animals, Javanese, kebun-talun, pekarangan}, author = {Linda Christanty and Oekan S. Abdoellah and Gerald G. Marten and Johan Iskandar and Gerald G. Marten}, title = {Traditional agroforestry in West Java: The pekarangan (homegarden) and kebun-talun (annual-perennial rotation) cropping systems}, abstract = {This chapter looks at the role of kebun-talun and pekarangan in the Javanese landscape. Kebun-talun (rotation system between mixed garden and tree plantation) is a traditional system that increases overall production and serves multiple functions by sequentially combining agricultural crops with tree crops. Pekarangan (homegarden intercropping system) is a traditional system located in the villages that provides both subsistence and commercial products and serves multiple functions by simultaneously combining agricultural crops with tree crops and animals.}, year = {1986}, journal = {Traditional agriculture in southeast Asia: A human ecology perspective}, pages = {132-157}, month = {01/1986}, publisher = {Westview Press}, address = {Boulder, CO}, isbn = {0-8133-7026-4}, url = {http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/12975293}, language = {English}, }