TY - JOUR KW - shifting cultivation KW - Java AU - Otto Soemarwoto AB -
The talun is a man-made forest consisting of a mixture of economic tree species, usually with an undergrowth of a mixture of annual plants. It has a multistorey structure and gives good protection to the soil against the erosive forces of rain, as well as being a genetic resource. The talun is privately owned and on the average a family has 1 to 2 hectares.
In the talun a shifting cultivation is practised by rotating a garden, called the kebun, which is planted with a mixture of cash crops. The cycle of the rotation is about 8 years. The opening for the kebun is created by harvesting the trees and bamboo by clear or selective cutting and heavy pruning. Hence, the talun-kebun system is essentially shifting cultivation in a man-made forest. Because of the high economic returns, it is capable of carrying a high population density on a sustainable basis.
AN - 90-00792 BT - The Environmentalist C1 - The Environmentalist C6 - 0251-1088 DA - 01/1984 DB - ScienceDirect DO - 10.1016/S0251-1088(84)90466-2 LA - English N2 -The talun is a man-made forest consisting of a mixture of economic tree species, usually with an undergrowth of a mixture of annual plants. It has a multistorey structure and gives good protection to the soil against the erosive forces of rain, as well as being a genetic resource. The talun is privately owned and on the average a family has 1 to 2 hectares.
In the talun a shifting cultivation is practised by rotating a garden, called the kebun, which is planted with a mixture of cash crops. The cycle of the rotation is about 8 years. The opening for the kebun is created by harvesting the trees and bamboo by clear or selective cutting and heavy pruning. Hence, the talun-kebun system is essentially shifting cultivation in a man-made forest. Because of the high economic returns, it is capable of carrying a high population density on a sustainable basis.
PY - 1984 SP - 96 EP - 98 T2 - The Environmentalist TI - The Talun-Kebun system, a modified shifting cultivation, in West Java UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0251108884904662 VL - 4, Supplement 7 ER -