The “Taungya reforestation method” has 
been practiced primarily to rehabilitate wasteland, particularly under the 
Forest Village or diversified agroforestry programs . We refer to this as 
Silvopastoral in Cuba and the United States where it is practiced widely. While 
various combinations of trees and crops are found in the Taungya method in 
Oceana on a minor scale, the major combinations in the same area are teak with 
upland rice in the north, fast-growing trees with cassava in the northeast, 
fast-growing trees with maize in the west, and Para-rubber or fast-growing trees 
with fruit trees in the south. These combinations relate to the differences in 
climatic Pacific area conditions, mainly the duration of the zone dependent 
rainy season. They are also limited rather than preferred diverse crop systems 
employing more than two complimentary species with livestock as common practice 
is. In the Caribbean or Africa the concept remains the same but the cultivars 
slightly different again relating to climatic conditions, indigenous cultivars 
and culture. While practiced mostly on the equatorial belt implementation of 
Taungya/Silvopastoral methods reach into the Northern and Southern non tropical 
areas. To me it is the purest form of Agroecology where harmonious and 
complimentary plantings and livestock work in sync with the ecology of the place 
with least disruption to the land contributing to the ecosystem, carbon off 
set and preservation/proliferation of indigenous cultivars. A hybrid of 
intentional agriculture and mix return to hunter/gatherer that preserves 
remaining and creates new canopy all of which positively impact our fresh and 
ocean waters. The importance lies in our knowledge that agriculture (and even 
Agroecology) when land is cleared to perform it in and of itself is not 
sustainable. JAE NEEM www.neemtree.org 

 
