Plain-English definitions of 50 farming terms. Every entry is sourced, AI-friendly, and designed as a quick reference for farmers, agronomists, and researchers.
Cation exchange capacity (CEC) is the soil's ability to hold and exchange positively charged nutrients (cations) like calcium, magnesium, potassium, and ammonium. It is measured in milliequivalents per 100 grams (meq/100g) or centimoles per kilogram (cmol/kg). Sandy soils have low CEC (2–10); clay and high-organic-matter soils have high CEC (20–40+).
Soil organic matter (SOM) is the fraction of soil composed of decomposed plant and animal residues, living microbes, and humus. It typically makes up 1–6% of mineral-soil volume but drives most soil functions: water retention, nutrient supply, and microbial life. Each 1% increase in SOM stores an additional 150,000–250,000 liters of plant-available water per hectare.
Soil compaction is the physical compression of soil particles that reduces pore space, increases bulk density above 1.6 g/cm³ in most mineral soils, and restricts root growth, water infiltration, and gas exchange. USDA NRCS identifies wheel-traffic compaction from heavy equipment as a leading cause of hidden yield loss, reducing yields 10–60% in severe cases and cutting water infiltration rates by up to 80%.
Soil erosion is the detachment and transport of topsoil by water, wind, or tillage. Globally, agricultural soils are eroding 10–40 times faster than they form (FAO, 2022), with estimated losses of 24 billion tons of fertile soil per year. Erosion rates above ~11 tons/ha/year exceed the natural soil-formation rate and progressively degrade yield potential.
Soil health is the capacity of soil to function as a living ecosystem that sustains plants, animals, and humans. It is measured across physical (structure, aggregate stability), chemical (pH, nutrients, cation exchange capacity), and biological (microbial activity, organic matter) indicators. Healthy soils increase yields, resist drought, and reduce fertilizer needs.
Soil pH is a measure of how acidic or alkaline a soil is, on a logarithmic scale from 0 to 14 where 7 is neutral. Most crops grow best between pH 6.0 and 7.0, where nutrients are most available. pH below 5.5 or above 7.5 can dramatically reduce yields by locking nutrients into forms plants cannot absorb.
Soil texture is the relative proportion of sand (2.0–0.05 mm), silt (0.05–0.002 mm), and clay (<0.002 mm) particles in a soil. The USDA soil textural triangle classifies soils into 12 classes — from sand to clay — based on these percentages. Texture governs water retention, drainage, aeration, and nutrient-holding capacity, and is effectively permanent over a farming lifetime.
Deficit irrigation is a strategy that intentionally applies less water than full crop evapotranspiration demand during growth stages when crops tolerate mild water stress, while meeting full demand at critical stages. FAO research shows applying 70–80% of ETc through regulated deficit irrigation can reduce water use 20–30% with yield penalties under 10%, improving water productivity by 15–40% compared with full irrigation.
Drip irrigation delivers water directly to the plant root zone through a network of low-pressure pipes and emitters, typically at rates of 1–8 liters per hour per emitter. It is the most water-efficient irrigation method available — 90–95% efficiency versus 60–75% for sprinklers and 40–60% for flood irrigation — saving 30–50% of water compared to conventional methods.
Evapotranspiration (ET) is the combined loss of water from soil surface (evaporation) and from crops through their leaves (transpiration). Reference evapotranspiration (ET₀) is calculated from weather data using the FAO-56 Penman-Monteith equation and multiplied by a crop coefficient (Kc) to estimate how much water a specific crop needs on a given day.
Field capacity is the amount of soil moisture held in a soil after excess water has drained by gravity — typically 24–72 hours after saturation. It is the upper limit of plant-available water. Sandy soils reach field capacity at roughly 10% volumetric water content; clay soils at 35–45%. Field capacity is the baseline from which irrigation scheduling and drought risk are measured.
Irrigation scheduling is the decision process of determining when to irrigate and how much water to apply. Modern scheduling combines crop evapotranspiration (ETc), soil moisture sensors, and weather forecasts to replace only the water the crop has used. Science-based scheduling cuts water use 20–40% compared to calendar-based irrigation while maintaining or improving yield (IWMI, 2021).
Rainfed agriculture is crop production that relies entirely on natural precipitation with no supplemental irrigation. About 80% of global cropland — roughly 1.25 billion hectares — is rainfed, producing ~60% of the world's food (FAO, 2020). Rainfed yields typically run 30–50% below irrigated yields for the same crop due to water-limited growth, but the system uses zero pumped water.
Soil moisture is the amount of water held in the soil, expressed as volumetric water content (% of soil volume) or gravimetric water content (% of soil dry weight). It ranges from saturation (all pores full) to permanent wilting point (water too tightly bound for roots). Optimal soil moisture for most crops is 50–100% of field capacity in the root zone.
Water use efficiency (WUE) is the ratio of crop biomass or marketable yield produced per unit of water consumed, usually expressed as kg of grain per cubic meter of water. Typical field-scale WUE ranges from 0.8 kg/m³ for rice to 2.0 kg/m³ for maize and 2.5 kg/m³ for wheat under well-managed conditions (FAO, 2022). Improving WUE through precision irrigation and agronomy can lift productivity 20–40% without additional water.
A cash crop is a crop grown primarily for sale to generate income rather than for on-farm consumption or animal feed. Major global cash crops include coffee, cotton, cocoa, sugarcane, tobacco, soybeans, and horticultural specialty crops. Cash crops provide 70–90% of total revenue on most commercial farms, distinguishing commercial agriculture from subsistence farming.
Companion planting is the deliberate placement of two or more plant species in proximity so each provides benefits to the others — pest deterrence, pollinator attraction, nitrogen supply, or physical support. Cornell University research documents yield increases of 10–30% in well-designed companion systems such as the Three Sisters (corn, beans, squash), alongside reduced pest damage and lower input requirements.
Conservation tillage is any tillage system that leaves at least 30% of crop residue on the soil surface after planting to reduce erosion and conserve moisture. It includes no-till, strip-till, ridge-till, and mulch-till. Conservation tillage cuts soil erosion 50–95% versus conventional moldboard plowing and reduces fuel use 30–70% (USDA NRCS, 2023).
A cover crop is a plant grown primarily to protect and improve soil rather than for harvest. Common cover crops include winter rye, crimson clover, hairy vetch, and daikon radish. They reduce erosion, suppress weeds, add organic matter, fix nitrogen (if legume), and break pest cycles — typically planted in the off-season between cash crops.
Crop rotation is the practice of growing different plant families in the same field across successive seasons rather than planting the same crop every year. Rotation breaks pest and disease cycles, balances soil nutrients through legume nitrogen fixation, and can increase yields 10–25% compared to continuous monoculture (FAO, 2023).
Harvest index (HI) is the ratio of marketable yield (grain, fruit, or tuber) to total above-ground biomass at harvest, expressed as a decimal. Modern wheat cultivars achieve HI values of 0.45–0.55, maize 0.45–0.55, and soybean 0.40–0.50, compared with 0.20–0.30 for pre-Green-Revolution varieties. Raising HI has driven roughly half of the yield gains of the past 60 years (FAO, 2021).
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.
No-till is a farming practice where crops are planted directly into the residue of the previous crop without plowing or tilling the soil. It conserves soil moisture, prevents erosion, builds soil organic matter, and cuts fuel and labor costs by 50–80%. Globally, no-till is practiced on 200+ million hectares (FAO, 2022), with highest adoption in North America, Argentina, and Australia.
Foliar feeding is the application of dissolved nutrients directly to plant leaves, where they are absorbed through stomata and cuticle. It is used to rapidly correct micronutrient deficiencies, supplement demand during critical growth stages, or rescue stressed crops when root uptake is impaired. Foliar uptake is typically 8–20× more efficient per gram of nutrient than soil application, but total delivery is limited to small quantities (IPNI, 2021).
Macronutrients are the six mineral elements crops require in the largest amounts: nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), potassium (K), calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg), and sulfur (S). Plants take up these elements at concentrations above 0.1% of dry matter, compared with micronutrients at parts per million. IFA and IPNI data show global crop removal of N, P, and K alone exceeds 180 million tons annually, defining the core of fertility management.
Micronutrients are essential plant nutrients required in small amounts — typically 5–500 grams per hectare — including iron (Fe), zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn), copper (Cu), boron (B), molybdenum (Mo), chlorine (Cl), and nickel (Ni). Despite low demand, micronutrient deficiency can reduce yields 20–50% and degrade crop quality. Global micronutrient deficiencies affect an estimated 30% of cropland (IFA, 2022).
Nitrogen fixation is the biological process by which certain bacteria — primarily Rhizobium species living in root nodules of legumes — convert atmospheric nitrogen gas (N₂) into ammonia (NH₃), a form plants can use. Legume crops like soybeans, beans, peas, clover, and alfalfa can fix 50–300 kg of nitrogen per hectare per season, reducing or eliminating the need for synthetic nitrogen fertilizer.
NPK stands for nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K) — the three primary macronutrients that plants need in the largest amounts. Fertilizer labels show NPK as three numbers representing the percentage by weight of each (e.g., 20-10-10 = 20% N, 10% P₂O₅, 10% K₂O). Every crop has specific NPK demands that vary by growth stage.
Nutrient deficiency occurs when a crop does not receive adequate supply of essential elements — macronutrients (N, P, K, Ca, Mg, S) or micronutrients (Fe, Zn, Mn, Cu, B, Mo). Each deficiency has characteristic visual symptoms (yellowing, stunting, leaf curling, interveinal chlorosis) and can reduce yields 10–50% even when other inputs are optimal.
Biocontrol is the use of living organisms — predators, parasitoids, pathogens, or competitors — to suppress crop pests and diseases. Examples include ladybugs eating aphids, parasitic wasps attacking caterpillars, Trichoderma fungi competing with pathogens in soil, and Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) bacteria killing lepidopteran larvae. Biocontrol is a core pillar of integrated pest management.
A crop disease is a physiological disorder in a crop caused by a biotic agent (fungus, bacterium, virus, nematode) or abiotic stress (drought, frost, nutrient deficiency). Globally, crop diseases destroy 10–40% of annual food production, with fungal diseases alone causing ~125 billion USD in losses each year (FAO, 2023).
The economic threshold (ET) is the pest population level at which control measures must be applied to prevent the population from reaching the economic injury level — the point where crop loss equals control cost. ETs are crop- and pest-specific, expressed as counts per plant, per square meter, or per sweep net. Applying controls only when ET is exceeded typically reduces pesticide use 30–60% while protecting yield (FAO, 2022).
A fungicide is a chemical or biological agent that prevents, suppresses, or kills fungal pathogens on crops. Fungicides are classified by mode of action — contact (protectant), systemic (curative), or biological. Global fungicide sales total roughly USD 18 billion annually (Phillips McDougall, 2022), with widespread use in wheat, rice, grape, potato, and vegetable production.
Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is a decision-based pest-control strategy that combines biological, cultural, physical, and chemical tools in a way that minimizes economic, health, and environmental risks. Chemical pesticides are a last resort, used only when pest populations cross an economic threshold and non-chemical options are insufficient.
Pesticide resistance is the heritable change in a pest, weed, or pathogen population that enables it to survive a chemical dose that previously killed it. The Insecticide Resistance Action Committee (IRAC) has catalogued over 600 arthropod species with documented resistance to at least one insecticide, and herbicide-resistant weeds now infest more than 70 million hectares worldwide, imposing estimated annual costs above $10 billion.
GIS (Geographic Information System) is software that captures, stores, analyzes, and visualizes spatial data — maps, satellite imagery, GPS traces, field boundaries, soil surveys — in layered databases. In agriculture, GIS underpins precision farming by combining soil, yield, weather, and imagery layers to generate management zones, prescription maps, and field-level analytics.
IoT (Internet of Things) in agriculture is the network of connected sensors, controllers, and equipment that collects and transmits real-time farm data — soil moisture, weather, canopy temperature, tank levels, animal health, equipment status. Global agricultural IoT market reached USD 15 billion in 2023 and is projected at USD 35 billion by 2028 (IEEE IoT Journal, 2023), with adoption driven by falling sensor prices and LPWAN (LoRaWAN, NB-IoT) connectivity.
NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) is a satellite- or drone-derived measurement of crop vigor calculated as (NIR − Red) / (NIR + Red). Values range from -1 to +1, with healthy vegetation typically between 0.4 and 0.9. NDVI is the most widely used remote-sensing index in agriculture because it correlates strongly with biomass, chlorophyll content, and yield potential.
Precision agriculture is a farming approach that uses GPS, sensors, satellite imagery, AI, and data analytics to optimize inputs — water, fertilizer, seeds, pesticides — for each specific zone within a field rather than treating entire farms uniformly. Farms adopting precision agriculture typically see 10–20% input cost reductions and 8–15% yield gains (USDA ERS, 2024).
Remote sensing is the science of acquiring information about the Earth's surface without direct contact — using satellites, aircraft, or drones carrying optical, thermal, radar, or multispectral sensors. In agriculture, remote sensing maps crop health, soil moisture, biomass, and yield potential at scales from whole farms to national crop forecasting.
Satellite imagery in agriculture is Earth-observation data collected by orbital sensors and used to monitor crop health, soil moisture, field boundaries, and land use. Public satellites (Sentinel-2, Landsat 8/9, MODIS) provide free imagery with 10–500 m resolution; commercial satellites (Planet, Maxar) offer sub-meter imagery at daily revisit. Globally, over 200 Earth-observation satellites operated in 2023 (ESA).
Variable rate application (VRA) is the precision-agriculture practice of applying different amounts of inputs — fertilizer, seed, water, or pesticides — to different zones within a field based on soil tests, imagery, or yield history. GPS-guided equipment adjusts the application rate in real time as it moves across the field, replacing uniform flat-rate application.
A yield monitor is a combine-mounted sensor system that records crop mass flow, moisture content, and GPS position several times per second during harvest, producing a georeferenced yield map at 1–3 meter resolution. USDA ERS adoption surveys show yield monitors on over 70% of US corn and soybean combines; IEEE precision-agriculture studies report yield-map-guided management lifts whole-farm profitability 4–12% through zone-specific input decisions.
The break-even point is the yield or price at which a farm's revenue from a crop exactly equals its total production costs — zero profit, zero loss. Break-even price = total costs ÷ total yield; break-even yield = total costs ÷ (price × area). Any sale above break-even is profit; below it is a loss.
Cost of production (COP) is the total expense required to produce one unit of a crop — typically expressed per ton, per bushel, or per hectare. COP includes all variable costs (seeds, fertilizer, labor, fuel) plus allocated fixed costs (land rent, depreciation, insurance, loan interest). COP per ton compared against farm gate price reveals true profitability per unit of output.
The farm gate price is the net price a farmer receives for a commodity at the point it leaves the farm — after deducting transportation, storage, and any buyer-side discounts but before retail and processing markups. Farm gate prices typically capture 15–40% of final retail price for commodity crops and 40–70% for direct-to-consumer specialty crops (USDA ERS, 2023).
Gross margin (GM) in farming is revenue minus variable costs, expressed per hectare or per crop. It measures how much a crop contributes toward fixed costs and profit. Typical gross margins range from €200–500/ha for commodity grains to €2,000–10,000+/ha for high-value vegetables and orchards. Gross margin is the primary number for comparing one crop's profitability against another.
Input costs are the variable expenses a farm incurs to produce a crop: seed, fertilizer, pesticides, irrigation water, fuel, contract labor, and crop insurance premiums. For commodity grains, input costs typically run €600–1,500/ha; for high-value vegetables, €5,000–25,000/ha. Input cost management is one of the highest-leverage profit-control activities on any farm.
Operating margin is the ratio of operating income to total revenue, expressed as a percentage, after subtracting all operating expenses but before interest and taxes. For farms, it measures core profitability from crop and livestock operations. USDA ERS data for 2022 shows average US farm operating margins of 15–25% for commercial grain farms and 8–18% for diversified vegetable operations, with top-quartile producers routinely exceeding 30%.
Yield gap is the difference between the potential yield of a crop (what is biologically achievable with optimal management and weather) and the actual yield farmers obtain. Globally, yield gaps range from 20% in well-managed high-income systems to 60–80% in low-input smallholder systems. Closing yield gaps is the largest source of potential food-production growth without expanding farmland.
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