Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Agrobio-Cultural Diversity of Alder Based Shifting Cultivation Practiced by Angami Tribes in Khonoma Village, Kohima, Nagaland


Affiliations
1 Rain Forest Research Institute, Jorhat - 785 001, India
 

North East India is one of the culturally diverse regions in the world inhabited by more than 200 tribes in eight states. Also, the region is one of the biodiversity hot spots of the world. The region is endowed with rich floral, faunal and sociocultural diversity. These tribes have originated from the ethnic groups of Tibeto-Burmese and Indo-Mongoloids1. The tribal communities of this region live in hilly areas and depend on forest resources for their livelihood. Shifting cultivation is the major agricultural land use system in undulating hilly terrains of this region.
User
Notifications
Font Size

  • https://www.quora.com/in/How-many-tribes-are-there-in-Northeast-India (retrieved on 30 April 2018 at 09.06 am).
  • Talukdar, N. C. and Thakuria, D., ENVIS Newsletter on Himalayan Ecology. 2015, 12(4), 5.
  • Rathore, S. S., Karunakaran, K. and Prakash, B., Ind. J. Trad. Know., 2010, 9(4), 677–680.
  • http://northeasttourism.gov.in/khonoma.html#sthash.cFZTYDjL.dpbs (retrieved on 30 April 2018 at 09.10 am).

Abstract Views: 264

PDF Views: 80




  • Agrobio-Cultural Diversity of Alder Based Shifting Cultivation Practiced by Angami Tribes in Khonoma Village, Kohima, Nagaland

Abstract Views: 264  |  PDF Views: 80

Authors

krishna Giri
Rain Forest Research Institute, Jorhat - 785 001, India
Gaurav Mishra
Rain Forest Research Institute, Jorhat - 785 001, India
R. S. C. Jayaraj
Rain Forest Research Institute, Jorhat - 785 001, India
Rajesh Kumar
Rain Forest Research Institute, Jorhat - 785 001, India

Abstract


North East India is one of the culturally diverse regions in the world inhabited by more than 200 tribes in eight states. Also, the region is one of the biodiversity hot spots of the world. The region is endowed with rich floral, faunal and sociocultural diversity. These tribes have originated from the ethnic groups of Tibeto-Burmese and Indo-Mongoloids1. The tribal communities of this region live in hilly areas and depend on forest resources for their livelihood. Shifting cultivation is the major agricultural land use system in undulating hilly terrains of this region.

References





DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv115%2Fi4%2F598-599