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Title

SUSTAINABILITY OF APPLE PRODUCTION IN THE TROPICS USING LAND RENT ANALYSIS IN BATU CITY INDONESIA.

Authors

Samudra, Ferdianto Budi; Sitorus, Santun R. P.; Santosa, Edi; Machfud

Abstract

Apples have gone through a long process of adapting to the Indonesian climate. Limited availability of non-renewable land creates fierce competition for land use. The purpose of this study was to a) determine the history and condition of apple farming, b) to analyze the land rent value of apple plants with plants that have the potential to replace them, namely oranges, guava, and seasonal plants, c) to determine the factors that affect the land rent value of citrus, guava, and seasonal plants. Data obtained through interviews with selected informants using a questionnaire and analyzed using land rent analysis to determine the value and factors that influence it. The results showed that apple plants' introduction has resulted in several varieties that have successfully adapted to the Indonesian climate. Indonesian apples' development is still 99.81% centered in East Java, with bad apples' sustainability because the land rent value is much lower than other commodities.

Subjects

INDONESIA; APPLE yields; SUSTAINABILITY; AGRICULTURAL productivity; CITRUS

Publication

Plant Archives (09725210), 2021, Vol 21, Issue 2, p221

ISSN

0972-5210

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.51470/PLANTARCHIVES.2021.v21.no2.035

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