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Horticulture is small scale, low intensity farming. This subsistence pattern involves at least part time planting and tending of domesticated food plants. Pigs, chickens, or other relatively small domesticated animals are often raised for food and prestige. Many horticultural societies supplement their farming subsistence base with occasional hunting and gathering of wild plants and animals. Horticulturalist population densities are higher than those of most foragers and pastoralists. Usually, there are at least 1-10 people per square mile with community sizes ranging from around 30 to several hundred. In most cases, horticulture is more productive than foraging (with the exception of aquatic foraging). Some horticulturalists are not only subsistence farmers but also produce a small surplus to sell or exchange in local markets for things that they cannot produce themselves.
Pigs raised for food and sale on a small horticultural farm in Colombia
Women from a Papua New Guinea horticultural village selling fruits and vegetables in a small town market
Horticulture is still practiced successfully in tropical forest areas in the Amazon Basin and on mountain slopes in South and Central America as well as low population density areas of Central Africa, Southeast Asia, and Melanesia . In the past, it was a common subsistence base elsewhere in the world until population densities rose to high levels and people were forced to develop more intensive farming methods.
Horticulturalists usually have a shifting pattern of field use. When production drops due to the inevitable depletion of soil nutrients, horticulturalists move to a new field or a long fallow one to plant their crops. They clear the wild vegetation with a slash and burn technique. Brush and small trees are cut down and allowed to dry out in place. They are then burned. This simultaneously clears the field of all but large trees and adds ash to the soil surface. The ash acts as a fertilizer. No other fertilizer is applied to the field. As a result, soil productivity lasts only for a few years.
Hillside field in Colombia cleared of wild vegetation by the slash and burn technique (note the ash covered soil)
Colombian horticulturalists using hand tools to work their land in preparation for planting
Horticulturalists do not have large beasts of burden to pull plows. Likewise, they don't have mechanized farming equipment such as tractors or rototillers. They use pointed sticks, hoes, or other hand tools to make holes in the soil to plant their seeds, tubers, and cuttings. This is a labor intensive but not capital intensive form of farming. Pesticides and herbicides are not used by traditional subsistence horticulturalists. Likewise, irrigation is rarely used.
Like pastoralists, many horticultural societies in the past carried out periodic inter-village raiding in which people were killed. The goal was usually revenge for perceived wrongs and, at times, the theft of women, children, dogs, and other things of value. The horticulturalists of New Guinea and the Amazon Basin were particularly interested in raiding their neighbors. The Yanomam of Venezuela and Brazil are one of the most well documented aggressive horticultural peoples. The ethnographer Napoleon Chagnon reported that in the past as many as 1/3 of Yanomam men died of injuries acquired in raids.
grows up, it provides support for the climbing bean plant. The squash grows over the ground and keeps down the weeds. Another example of the practical farming knowledge of horticulturalists was found among the Birom people of the Jos Plateau in north central Nigeria. An important food of the Birom was the tiny seeds from a grass that they called acha. This cereal crop was traditionally grown in fields without the use of added fertilizers. During the first half of the 20th century when Nigeria was still a British colony, colonial officials concluded that the Birom were ignorant of the effects of fertilizer because they did not put manure on their fields. In fact, the acha crops failed when the Birom were induced by government officials to fertilize them. Acha grows too quickly in enriched soils, falls over from its own weight, and rots before its seeds are ripe. Following this failed experiment, the Birom were allowed to return to their traditional farming practices.
of fertilizer must be added to the soil regularly due to the leaching effect of heavy rain fall. Because mono-cropping is the usual practice with this kind of agriculture, th
Comparisons
Over the last 10,000 years, human populations have grown rapidly. This has resulted in increased pressure to produce more food with the same amount of land. As a consequence, our foraging ancestors were forced to change their subsistence patterns radically. Horticulture and pastoralism solved the problem for several thousand years. However, by 5,000 years ago in some regions of the world, intensive agriculture became a necessity. During the 19th and 20th centuries, most of humanity was forced to adopt this means of food production. Accompanying the transition to intensive agriculture was the development of towns, cities, and international commerce.
With each successive stage in this transition, people steadily moved away from a passive dependence on the environment. As human populations grew, more food had to be provided, which inevitably meant that there had to be greater control of food sources. Foragers and pastoralists generally use their environments without changing them significantly. In contrast, regions occupied by the early intensive farming societies were radically altered. Forests were cut down, the land was leveled, and the courses of rivers were altered to provide irrigation water. Many wild plant and animal species came to be defined as weeds or pests and were eradicated. Others were genetically altered through
thousands of years of selective breeding to be more useful for people. They became the domesticated food plants and farm animals that are critical to our life today. Societies generally became more complex with each successive stage in this transition from foraging to intensive agriculture. Most foragers had small communities without permanent leaders or other full-time non-food-producing specialists. Their political systems were more or less egalitarian . Relationships were based mainly on kinship ties and friendship. In contrast, societies that rely on intensive agriculture to supply their food have class stratification and elaborate political systems Political elites in contemporary society with hierarchies of leaders and bureaucrats. They are no longer societies of equals. Some individuals become rich and politically powerful through their control of the means of production, while others face conditions of poverty with severe periodic food shortages. This discrepancy in access to resources has been common in largescale agricultural societies. However, economic inequality was significantly reduced in industrial nations during the 20th century as a result of the evolution of more democratic political systems and taxation that redistributed society's wealth to some degree. Increased efficiency in food production has resulted in a dramatic rise in the number of non-food-producers. Among foragers, it is common for 100% of the healthy adult population to participate directly in getting food. In Bangladesh, Guatemala, and other relatively poor developing nations today, where farming has not been significantly mechanized, 60-65% of the population are food producers. In the United States, less than 1% of the entire population are still farmers. Those farmers not only provide food and fiber for all of the non-foodproducing Americans but also for millions of people elsewhere in the world. It is ironic, that this dramatically increased food production has not resulted in more leisure time. Far from it, Americans now individually work more hours during the year than almost all other nations.
The transition to intensive agriculture apparently had a major effect on the spread of human parasitic diseases . The higher population densities of people resulting from this subsistence pattern made it far easier for contagion to rapidly pass from individual to individual. Major epidemics of bubonic plague , small pox, influenza , and other scourges are far more likely to spread rapidly in towns and cities than among relatively isolated small communities of foragers or horticulturalists. They are also more likely to infect a higher percentage of the people in a dense population. It is not surprising that the global influenza epidemic of 1918 killed 20-40 million people. The number of deaths due to AIDS is likely to be far higher than this during the next 10-20 years. Africa will be especially hard hit by it. Our large modern cities with their vast areas of concrete and asphalt change the local microclimate by altering the amount of solar energy that is absorbed rather than reflected back out into space. Cities literally become hot spots. These artificial man-made environments also usually experience air and water pollution problems not encountered when our populations were smaller and more dispersed. In addition, our burgeoning populations progressively deplete important natural resources such as drinking water, natural gas, and oil. Another consequence of the transition to intensive agriculture and large-scale societies has been a change in the nature of warfare. While most foraging societies were peaceful and avoided violent conflicts with other societies when possible, all of the ancient civilizations carried out bloody wars of conquest. Some pastoralist societies were aggressive conquerors as well. As agriculture became more intensive and populations larger in modern times, the scale of war increased dramatically. Far more people were killed as a result of warfare during the 20th century than in any other century in history. Armies were much larger and better equipped with efficient mass killing machines.
On the positive side, however, the 20th century also saw a rapid increase in scientific knowledge and life expectancy in the developed nations. The time between major technological revolutions has shortened to less than a single human generation. By comparison, the lives of our relatively isolated, selfsufficient forager ancestors remained largely unchanged over many generations.