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N
nitrogen-fixing
plant
A
plant that can assimilate and fix the free nitrogen of the atmosphere with the
aid of bacteria living in root nodules.
nodule
Nitrogen-fixing
root swelling of characteristic shape and size for particular leguminous species
that contain rhizobia. If the rhizobial strain is effective, atmospheric
nitrogen can be fixed and is readily utilizable by the
plant.
normal-aged
forest
A
forest composed of a series of age classes in proportions that permit sustained
yield by felling under an appropriate system.
nursery
stock
Shrub
or tree species grown in a plant nursery for planting out
elsewhere.
O
open
forest
A
'forest' where the canopy is not closed and a large proportion of the area does
not carry trees.
organic
farming
The
production of crops from land that does not receive and has not received (for a
stated period of time) any inorganic inputs (fertilizers, pesticides, and so
on).
ornamental
Any
tree or plant that is planted for its beauty. This does not mean that it has no
other uses. For example, Chlorophora excelsa is often planted as an
avenue tree along roadsides (in Uganda); its stately appearance in no way
diminishes its usefulness for timber. Ornamentals with other uses in
agroforestry are the Cassias and Senna spp.
overstorey
The
portion of trees in a forest stand forming the upper crown
cover.
P
palm
Member
of the Aracaceae (previously Palmae) family, containing over 200 genera and more
than 2700 species, many of them economically important for food, fibre, canes,
waxes, wood, thatch, and so forth.
permaculture
'Permanent
agriculture'. The design and maintenance of sustainable, ecologically
favourable, energy efficient agricultural and horticultural systems. The concept
includes not only agroforestry but the integration of organic farming principles
and intermediate technology, the use of renewable resources and recycling, the
exploitation of biodiversity, conservation and habitat protection,as well as
social and institutional well-being. It can be applied to urban as well as rural
environments.
pest
In the
general sense, an insect pest, fungal or viral pathogen, weed, or avian or
mammalian pest (birds, rodents).
pH
A
numerical measure of the acidity, or hydrogen ion activity, of a soil. The
neutral point is pH 7.0. All pH values below 7.0 are acid and all above are
alkaline. A change of one unit in pH value represents a tenfold change in
hydrogen-ion concentration. pH represents the `intensity' of acidity, not the
total exchangeable hydrogen or 'quantity' of potential
acidity.
plant
nursery
A
specially prepared site for germinating seeds and looking after seedlings and
young plants under conditions favourable for their growth and development.
Facilities for vegetative propagation are also often
present.
plant
population
The
number of plants per unit area. Sometimes referred to as 'plant density 'or
'planting density'.
pollarding
Cutting
back in more or less systematic fashion the crown of a tree but leaving a main
trunk to 1.5 m or so, with the object of harvesting small wood and browse, of
producing regrowth beyond the reach of animals or of reducing the shade cast by
the crown.
practice
In
agroforestry, a particular use of land involving woody and non-woody plants in
some spatial (simultaneous) or temporal (sequential) arrangement. For example,
hedgerow, intercropping, homegardens, shifting cultivation. Sometimes referred
to as an agroforestry 'technology'. An'agroforestry system' is a specific
example of a practice.
propagate
To
increase the number of a given plant type. Propagation can be by seed, root
sucker, stool, stump, root, stem or leaf cutting, grafting, layering or by
micropropagation.
provenance
The
place in which any stand of trees is growing. The stand may be indigenous or
non-indigenous.
pruning
1. The
process of cutting back growth of plants, including roots, but more
particularly, side branches of trees, or the sides and tops of
hedges.
2. General
term to describe the removal by cutting of buds, stems, or entire branches.
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