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sources. U.S. Department of Agriculture commodities such as rice, flour,
dry milk, lard, peanut butter, and
canned meat have been distributed for
typhoon relief. Agriculture extension
agents with new planting materials and
tools are assigned to damaged areas to
help the people replant food crops.
Water Resources

With an annual average rainfall of
over 100 inches a year, sufficient
ground water for crop production
exists in most areas. A lack of
supplemental water supplies for irrigation limits commercial vegetable production in the Mariana Islands during
the dry season. Certain atolls in the

Northern Marshalls have insufficient
water to sustain life throughout the
year. Lengthy droughts have a retarding effect on crop production
because supplemental water supplies
are not available.
Throughout the Territory, catchments and cisterns to hold water for

livestock are lacking. Piped water is
generally not available in the scattered
farms of Saipan, Rota, and Tinian
where water must be hauled to live-

stock herds during the dry season.

Very seldom is additional water
needed for crop growing in districts
other than the Marianas, except in
nurseries to start young plants for later

transplanting to the field. Lack of an

adequate irrigation system in the
Ponape District will inhibit expansion
of rice production’on a commercial
scale.
A
Chapter 4

LIVESTOCK

In 1964 a nonindigenous firm, the
Micronesian Development Company,
62

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was given a lease to develop 7,50
acres of land on Tinian, Marian:
Isiands District, for livestock. To date
250 acres have been planted in mixer
feed, corn, soybeans, and sorghum
With additional introduction from th,
United States. local purchases, an
normal herd production, the Micrc
nesian Development Company’s her.
has increased from 700 head in 196
to about 1800 head this year.
The principal livestock in the Terr
tory are swine and poultry. In add

tion, cattle, goats, and carabao a

found on the high islands. Chicker
are in greatest number and areleft
roam and breed at will, although a fe
poultry farmers at district cente
house their chickens and purchase hi
quality egg-laying birds from the Ag
culture Division. Swine husbandry
practiced in the Territory by eith
tethering, housing in small enclosur.

or allowing free range around t
farmstead. Breeding is done indiscri
inately, using any boar available. Ea
district center has foundation breed
stock of at least one breed of poult
a utility type, and two breeds
swine, either Duroc, Yorksh
Hampshire, or Berkshire. From

foundation stock, indigenous inh
itants can buy high quality breeder:
upgrade local strains of swine
poultry. About 10,000 straight
chicks and 170 young piglets «
distributed from the Agriculture C
sion this year to Micronesians.
Cattle, the third most impor:
type of livestock, are concentr
mostly in the Marianas District wi
runs 5,471 head out of a Terri
total of 5,945. The carabao is im
tant as a draft animal in Palau
Ponape.
The quantity and quality of
stock has been and is a prol
Part VI—Economic Advancer

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