Cultivator

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History and Evolution of Cultivators

  • Soil scratching for weed control dates back to ancient times using hoes or ploughs.
  • Harrows were developed by ganging hoes together and using draft animal power.
  • The powered rotary hoe was invented by Arthur Clifford Howard in 1912.
  • Cultivators are used for secondary tillage in agriculture, with toothed or rotary options for aerating soil and killing weeds.
  • Small toothed cultivators are used for small-scale gardening.

Commercial and Industrial Use of Cultivators

  • Cultivating for weed control has decreased with herbicide use in modern agriculture.
  • Mechanical cultivation remains a standby method for weed control, especially in organic farming.
  • Commercial cultivating is powered by tractors, with industrial cultivators varying in size and shape.
  • Cultivators can be trailed, mounted on a three-point hitch, or mounted beneath a tractor.
  • Cultivators are essential for affordable food production worldwide and play a crucial role in modern commercial agriculture.

Global Impact and Importance of Cultivators

  • Draft-animal power is still used in developing nations for cultivation.
  • Cultivators spare crop plants while disrupting weeds, making them indispensable in organic farming.
  • Cultivators continue to be crucial for affordable food production worldwide.
  • Mechanical cultivation is essential alongside herbicides, especially in wise management practices.
  • Cultivators are indispensable for affordable food production worldwide.

Types and Variants of Cultivators

  • Field cultivators are used for preparing seedbeds, controlling weeds, and mixing soil, with shanks and hydraulic cylinders for depth control.
  • Row crop cultivators are used for weed control between rows of established crops, raised and lowered by a three-point hitch.
  • Garden cultivators are used in small gardens for primary and secondary tillage, with rotary tillers and toothed cultivators offering specific advantages.
  • Variants like rotary tillers, rototillers, rotavators, and mini tillers provide compact and inexpensive alternatives for different farming scales.

Specific Cultivator Types and Applications

  • Primary tillage implements are used in lighter soils, with the largest versions being about 6m (20ft) wide.
  • Row crop cultivators have 1 to 36 rows wide, used for weed control between crop rows.
  • Garden cultivators are suitable for household and small commercial gardens, with specific variants like rotary tillers and mini tillers catering to different needs.
  • Two-wheel tractors, also known as walk-behind tractors, are used for various farming tasks in different terrains like wetlands, drylands, hills, mountains, and orchards.

Cultivator Data Sources

Reference URL
Glossary https:/glossary/cultivator
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultivator
Wikidata https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1273840
Knowledge Graph https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/065g14
DBPedia http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cultivator
Product Ontology http://www.productontology.org/id/Cultivator