Intercropping
Also called: polyculture, mixed cropping
Intercropping is the practice of growing two or more crops in the same field at the same time, either in alternating rows, strips, or mixed within rows. Well-designed intercrops can increase total productivity 20–60% compared to monoculture (FAO, 2021) while reducing pest pressure, improving soil health, and stabilizing farm income.
How Intercropping Works
Intercropping works by combining species with complementary needs and traits. Classic pairings exploit three dimensions: canopy (tall + short — corn and beans), roots (shallow + deep — onions and carrots), and time (early-maturing + late-maturing — radish and parsnip). Light, water, and nutrients are therefore partitioned rather than contested.
The most widely practiced intercrop globally is the cereal-legume pair: corn with beans, millet with cowpea, wheat with pea. The legume fixes nitrogen that partially feeds the cereal, while the cereal provides structure for climbing legumes. Land Equivalent Ratios (LER) — the area of monoculture needed to match intercrop production — typically reach 1.2–1.5, meaning an intercrop produces 20–50% more total output per hectare than the two crops grown separately.
Intercropping reduces several risks. Pest and disease pressure drops because monoculture pathogen buildup is interrupted. Weather risk spreads across crops with different drought and heat tolerances. Income risk spreads across multiple markets. Drawbacks include mechanization difficulty — mixed crops are harder to harvest mechanically, so intercropping remains more common in smallholder and organic systems than in large mechanized farms. Strip intercropping (alternating 4–12 row strips) is a compromise that gives many of the benefits while remaining machinery-friendly.
Sources
- FAO (2021). Intercropping: principles and production practices.
- Vandermeer (1989). The Ecology of Intercropping. Cambridge University Press.