Arable land () is any land capable of being ploughed and used to grow crops. Oxford English Dictionary, "arable, adj. and n." Oxford University Press (Oxford), 2013. Alternatively, for the purposes of agricultural statistics,The World Bank. Agricultural land (% of land area) http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/AG.LND.AGRI.ZS the term often has a more precise definition:
A more concise definition appearing in the Eurostat glossary similarly refers to actual rather than potential uses: "land worked (ploughed or tilled) regularly, generally under a system of crop rotation".Eurostat. Glossary: Arable land. http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/Glossary:Arable_land In Britain, arable land has traditionally been contrasted with pasturable land such as , which could be used for sheep-rearing but not as farmland.
Arable land is vulnerable to
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| { class="wikitable sortable" | + Arable land area (1000 ha) |
| 157,737 | |
| 156,067 | |
| 121,649 | |
| 119,474 | |
| 55,762 | |
| 38,648 | |
| 34,000 | |
| 32,924 | |
| 32,633 | |
| 30,573 | |
| + ! Country Name | 2013 |
| 0.254 | |
| 0.213 | |
| 0.196 | |
| 0.054 | |
| 0.038 | |
| 0.209 | |
| 0.044 | |
| 0.933 | |
| 0.150 | |
| 0.019 | |
| 1.999 | |
| 0.160 | |
| 0.204 | |
| 0.021 | |
| 0.001 | |
| 0.049 | |
| 0.039 | |
| 0.589 | |
| 0.073 | |
| 0.227 | |
| 0.262 | |
| 0.005 | |
| 0.133 | |
| 0.427 | |
| 0.264 | |
| 0.125 | |
| 0.372 | |
| 0.034 | |
| 0.012 | |
| 0.479 | |
| 0.363 | |
| 0.115 | |
| 0.108 | |
| 0.275 | |
| 0.279 | |
| 1.306 | |
| 0.003 | |
| 0.382 | |
| 0.373 | |
| 0.026 | |
| 0.074 | |
| 0.078 | |
| 0.036 | |
| 0.086 | |
| 0.098 | |
| 0.125 | |
| 0.049 | |
| 0.134 | |
| 0.206 | |
| 0.278 | |
| 0.070 | |
| 0.299 | |
| 0.429 | |
| 0.002 | |
| 0.083 | |
| 0.078 | |
| 0.076 | |
| 0.031 | |
| 0.120 | |
| 0.151 | |
| 0.480 | |
| 0.160 | |
| 0.062 | |
| 0.187 | |
| 0.409 | |
| 0.277 | |
| 0.009 | |
| 0.197 | |
| 0.236 | |
| 0.119 | |
| 0.145 | |
| 0.180 | |
| 0.232 | |
| 0.016 | |
| 0.028 | |
| 0.006 | |
| 0.064 | |
| 0.259 | |
| 0.171 | |
| 0.552 | |
| 0.103 | |
| 0.130 | |
| 0.000 | |
| 0.445 | |
| 0.374 | |
| 0.123 | |
| 0.094 | |
| 0.193 | |
| 0.147 | |
| 0.242 | |
| 0.253 | |
| 0.035 | |
| 0.113 | |
| 0.044 | |
| 0.033 | |
| 0.032 | |
| 1.726 | |
| 0.133 | |
| 0.018 | |
| 0.094 | |
| 0.030 | |
| 0.003 | |
| 0.223 | |
| 0.226 | |
| 0.600 | |
| 0.025 | |
| 0.119 | |
| 0.116 | |
| 0.274 | |
| 0.070 | |
| 0.774 | |
| 0.115 | |
| 0.199 | |
| 0.153 | |
| 0.235 | |
| 0.032 | |
| 0.010 | |
| 0.386 | |
| 0.021 | |
| 0.038 | |
| 0.116 | |
| 0.060 | |
| 0.186 | |
| 0.019 | |
| 0.510 | |
| 0.198 | |
| 0.013 | |
| 0.240 | |
| 0.213 | |
| 0.203 | |
| 0.341 | |
| 0.076 | |
| 0.062 | |
| 0.024 | |
| 0.123 | |
| 0.253 | |
| 0.866 | |
| 0.197 | |
| 0.019 | |
| 0.159 | |
| 0.010 | |
| 0.168 | |
| 0.048 | |
| 0.148 | |
| 0.041 | |
| 0.696 | |
| 0.136 | |
| 0.057 | |
| 0.284 | |
| 0.107 | |
| 0.017 | |
| 0.007 | |
| 0.438 | |
| 0.852 | |
| 0.107 | |
| 0.042 | |
| 0.032 | |
| 0.048 | |
| 0.102 | |
| 0.229 | |
| 0.460 | |
| 0.001 | |
| 0.256 | |
| 0.000 | |
| 0.258 | |
| 0.085 | |
| 0.036 | |
| 0.107 | |
| 0.235 | |
| 0.270 | |
| 0.063 | |
| 0.092 | |
| 0.016 | |
| 0.046 | |
| 0.345 | |
| 0.112 | |
| 0.140 | |
| 0.270 | |
| 0.050 | |
| 0.241 | |
| 0.106 | |
| 0.269 | |
| 0.249 | |
| 0.131 | |
| 0.382 | |
| 0.152 | |
| 0.019 | |
| 0.262 | |
| 0.270 | |
| 0.370 | |
| 0.030 | |
| 0.189 | |
| 0.715 | |
| 0.004 | |
| 0.098 | |
| 0.480 | |
| 0.682 | |
| 0.145 | |
| 0.079 | |
| 0.089 | |
| 0.071 | |
| 0.010 | |
| 0.011 | |
| 0.049 | |
| 0.243 | |
| 0.268 |
Other non-arable land includes land that is not suitable for any agricultural use. Land that is not arable, in the sense of lacking capability or suitability for cultivation for crop production, has one or more limitationsa lack of sufficient freshwater for irrigation, stoniness, steepness, adverse climate, excessive wetness with the impracticality of drainage, excessive salts, or a combination of these, among others.United States Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. 1961. Land capability classification. Agriculture Handbook 210. 21 pp. Although such limitations may preclude cultivation, and some will in some cases preclude any agricultural use, large areas unsuitable for cultivation may still be agriculturally productive. For example, United States NRCS statistics indicate that about 59 percent of US non-federal pasture and unforested rangeland is unsuitable for cultivation, yet such land has value for grazing of livestock.NRCS. 2013. Summary report 2010 national resources inventory. The United States Natural Resources Conservation Service. 163 pp. In British Columbia, Canada, 41 percent of the provincial Agricultural Land Reserve area is unsuitable for the production of cultivated crops, but is suitable for uncultivated production of forage usable by grazing livestock.Agricultural Land Commission. Agriculture Capability and the ALR Fact Sheet. http://www.alc.gov.bc.ca/alc/DownloadAsset?assetId=72876D8604EC45279B8D3C1B14428CF8&filename=agriculture_capability__the_alr_fact_sheet_2013.pdf Similar examples can be found in many rangeland areas elsewhere.
The use of artifices does not make the land arable. Rock still remains rock, and shallowless than turnable soil is still not considered toilable. The use of artifice is an open-air non-recycled water hydroponics relationship. The below described circumstances are not in perspective, have limited duration, and have a tendency to accumulate trace materials in soil that either there or elsewhere cause deoxygenation. The use of vast amounts of fertilizer may have unintended consequences for the environment by devastating rivers, waterways, and river endings through the accumulation of non-degradable toxins and nitrogen-bearing molecules that remove oxygen and cause non-aerobic processes to form.
Examples of infertile non-arable land being turned into fertile arable land include:
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