Haiti Food Crops
Harvesting rice in the Artibonite Valley
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Family sowing black beans in the Cul-de-Sac region
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Food crops fared somewhat better than cash crops in the
1980s, as prices for cash crops dropped, and economic
uncertainty
increased. Nonetheless, real per capita food production
declined,
and the country continued to import millions of tons of
grains.
The trend toward increased production of food crops had
negative
ecological consequences as the planting and the harvesting
of
tuber staples accelerated soil erosion. Haiti's peasants
were
already underfed. It was therefore unlikely that farmers
would
grow tree crops in place of staples without appropriate
incentives
(see Forestry
, this ch.).
Peasants cultivated a variety of cereals for food and
animal
feeds, notably corn, sorghum, and rice. Corn, also
referred to as
maize, was the leading food crop; it was sown on more
hectares--
220,000 in 1987--than any other crop. Farmers in southern
departments grew corn separately, but elsewhere they mixed
it
with other crops, mostly legumes. Total production
averaged
approximately 185,000 tons during the 1980s; yields
increased in
some areas. Drought-resistant sorghum often replaced corn
during
the second growing season as the leading crop, but total
hectares
planted and total production averaged only 156,250 and
125,000
tons, respectively. Rice became an increasingly common
cereal,
beginning in the 1960s, when increased irrigation of the
Artibonite Valley aided larger-scale farming
(see
fig. 11). Rice
production, however, fluctuated considerably, and it
remained
dependent on government subsidies. An estimated 60,000
hectares
of rice yielded an average of 123,000 tons, from 1980 to
1987.
Tubers were also cultivated as food. Sweet potatoes,
one of
the nation's largest crops, grew on an estimated 100,000
hectares, and they yielded 260,000 tons of produce a year
in the
1980s. Manioc, or cassava, another major tuber, was
mix-cropped
on upwards of 60,000 hectares to produce between 150,000
and
260,000 tons a year, much of which was for direct
consumption.
The cultivation of yams, limited by the lack of deep moist
soils,
took up only 26,000 hectares. The tropical Pacific tuber
taro,
called malangá in Haiti, grew with other tubers on
more
than 27,000 hectares.
Haitians also cultivated dozens of other food crops.
Red,
black, and other kinds of beans were very popular; they
provided
the main source of protein in the diet of millions. As
many as
129,000 hectares provided 67,000 tons of beans in 1987.
Banana
and plantain trees were also common and provided as much
as
500,000 tons of produce, almost entirely for domestic
consumption. Although the flimsy trees were vulnerable to
hurricanes and to droughts, rapid replanting helped
sustain the
crop. Mangoes, another tree crop, were a daily source of
food,
and they provided some exports. Other food crops included
citrus
fruit, avocados, pineapples, watermelons, almonds,
coconut, okra,
peanuts, tomatoes, breadfruit, and mamey (tropical
apricot). In addition, Haitians grew a wide variety of
spices for
food, medicine, and other purposes, including thyme,
anise,
marjoram, absinthe, oregano, black pepper, cinnamon,
cloves,
nutmeg, garlic, and horseradish.
Data as of December 1989
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