What is the Meaning & Definition of plantation

The term Plantation is a term used to refer to all that natural space which has been modified by humans to sow and harvest a particular type of vegetation. Plantations can be made with ecological or environmental purposes (for example, when a region has been deforested or damaged by fire and again they reframe specimens to keep the previously existing ecosystem), as well as also for economic purposes (for example, when we talk about plantation cane sugar or bananas). In the second case, the damage to the environment is significant since it implies is DeForest a region and replanted with other flora, or can also be the case that is planted extensive and intensively a local plant, but in so doing is massive so you end up altering the ecosystem. The word plantation may have a dye negative referring to different moments of history in which the human being has planted different types of vegetables only for profit. A clear example of this was the colonization that Europeans conducted in America and Africa, both spaces that conquered once were used for excessive generation of raw material. The most famous plantations were coffee, bananas, sugar cane and those of tropical fruits in different regions of America, especially in the current countries of Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela and the Caribbean. These plantations have been highly damaging to the ecosystem since they assumed a profound alteration of the flora and fauna existing as well as an excessive use of natural resources. On the other hand, the plantations have been traditionally organised with the use of slave labor, specially brought from Africa and forced to work under inhuman conditions abroad, without protection, attention to health and care. Apart from that, the term plantation can also be used with a positive sense when talking about plantations that are generated by humans to replenish the flora that was previously devastated and whose disappearance creates serious problems for the environment.