Classification Of Crops SS1 Agricultural Science Lesson Note
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Lesson Notes
Topic: Classification Of Crops
A crop is a plant which is cultivated by man for some beneficial purposes. Crops can be classified based on:
- Life cycle
- Morphology
- Uses.
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CLASSIFICATION BASED ON LIFE CYCLE
The life cycle of a crop is the period from the plantingthe of seed to maturity of the crop. Based on life cycle, crops can be grouped into three: –
- Annual Crops: These are crops which grow and complete their life cycle within a year e. g. cotton, cowpea, yam, rice etc.
- Biennial Crops: These are crops which grow and complete their life cycle within as year e. g. cassava, pepper, onions, carrot, ginger etc.
- Perennial Crops: These are crops which grow and complete their life cycle in more than two years e. g. banana, orange, cocoa, coconut etc.
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CLASSIFICATION BASED ON MORPHOLOGY
On the basis of morphology i.e. structure (form and shape of a plant), crops are classified as:
- Monocotyledonous Crops: These are crops which bear seeds that have only one seed leaf (cotyledon). Their leaves have parallel veins and they have fibrous root system. Examples include:maize, rice, millet, wheat,oil palm, grasses, etc.
- Dicotyledonous Crops: These are crops which bear seeds that have two seed leaves or cotyledons. They possess leaves with net veins and tap root system. Example include: mango, orange, cowpea, groundnut, kola nut, pepper, etc.
3. CLASSIFICATION BASED ON USES
- Cereals: – Crops grown for their grains or seeds which are rich in carbohydrates. They belong to the grass family e. g. maize, millet, rice, wheat, oat, barley, guinea corn etc.
- Legumes (Pulses): – These are crops grown for their seeds or grains which are rich in proteins e. g. cowpea, groundnut, soya beans, pigeon peas etc.
- Roots and Tubers: – These crops produce tubers under the ground that are rich in carbohydrates e. g. cassava, yam, potato, carrot, etc.
- Vegetable: These are crops grown for their leaves, fruits, or roots which are rich in vitamins and minerals e. g. tomato, lettuce, okro, amaranthus, cabbage etc.
- Spices: – These crops are also rich in vitamins and minerals and are rich in food flavours e. g. pepper, ginger, garlic, onions, curry etc.
- Beverage Crops: – They are used in making food drinks e. g. cocoa, coffee, tea, kola nut etc.
- Fruit Crops: – These are plants which bears edible fruits that are rich in vitamins and minerals e. g. oranges, cashew, guava, water melon etc.
- Oil Crops: – These are crops which produce edible oil when processed e. g. cotton seed, coconut, oil palm, groundnut, shear butter etc.
- Latex Crops: – They produce fluid called latex which when processed served as raw materials for making tyres, plastics, foam etc. Example is rubber tree.
- Fibre Crops: – They produce fibres used for making clothes, ropes, sacs etc. Examples include cotton, sisal, jute, hemp, kenaf etc.
- Drug Plants: – Crops grown for medicinal purposes e. g. tobacco, neem, Indian hemp etc.
- Forage Crops: – Crops grown to feed ruminant farm animals e. g. stylo, cowpea, guinea grass etc.Ornamental Crops: – Crops grown to beautify our environment e. g. hibiscus, morning glory etc.
ASSIGNMENT
- What are crops?
- Classify crops based on life cycle.
- Classify crops based on morphology.
- Classify crops based on uses.
- List out three examples of spice crops.
- State five biotic factors affecting agricultural production.