Working Trees For Wildlife

Featured Publication

Working Trees For Wildlife

Agroforestry provides many options for landowners to create wildlife habitat that is mutually beneficial. (6 pages)

Alley Cropping

Alley Cropping

In alley cropping, an agricultural crop is grown simultaneously with a long-term tree crop to provide annual income while the tree crop matures. Fine hardwoods, like walnut, oak, ash, and pecan, are favored species in alley cropping systems and can potentially provide high-value lumber or veneer logs. Nut crops can be another intermediate product.

Related Publications

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  • Working Trees
    • Working Trees For Agriculture
    • Working Trees For Communities
    • Working Trees For Water Quality
    • Working Trees For Wildlife
    • Working Trees For 2002 Farm Bill
  • Inside Agroforestry
    • Winter 2005: Canada
    • Summer / Fall 2003: SARE
    • Winter 2003: 2002 Farm Bill
    • Fall 2001 / Winter 2002: Alley Cropping
    • Spring 2001: Buffers
    • Spring 2000: Status Of Our Nation's Water
    • Winter 1996: Enterprise Development
    • Summer 1995: Sustainable Agriculture
    • Spring 1995: Agroforestry Is National
  • Agroforestry Notes
    • Alley Cropping: An Agroforestry Practice
  • Specialty Forest Products
    • Marketing Specialty Forest Products (4 pages)
    • Productive Conservation: Growing Specialty Forest Products In Agroforestry Plantings (4 pages)
    • Edible Woody Landscapes For People And Wildlife (4 pages)
    • Hybrid Hazelnuts: An Agroforesty Opportunity (4 pages)
  • Additional Brochures
    • National Association Of RC&D Councils (NARC&DC) Report: RC&D Survey Of Agroforestry Practices
    • Agroforestry In The United States: Research And Technology Transfer Needs For The Next Millennium

En Español

  • Árboles Trabajando
    • Árboles Trabajando En Beneficio De La Agricultura