Agriculture in Alaska
Agriculture in Alaska faces many challenges, largely due to the climate, the short growing season, and generally poor soils. However, the exceptionally long days of summer enable some vegetables to attain world record sizes.
Farms
The state of Alaska contains some 500 farms, covering about 830,000 acres in 2015, mainly to the northeast of the state's largest city, Anchorage, in the Matanuska Valley. The farms produce greenhouse and nursery crops, as well as hay, dairy produce, potatoes, and livestock including cattle, reindeer, bison, and yak. Cereals in the state include barley and oats. Other livestock include chickens, hogs, and sheep. By value, the top livestock commodities in 2015 were milk, eggs, and beef in that order.The exceptionally long summer days enable some vegetables to attain world record sizes, including a carrot of, a rutabaga of, and a cabbage of.
Alaskan soils
Alaska's commonest soil is tundra, which is rich in peat moss. It remains frozen as permafrost at depth, while the surface thaws in summer to a waterlogged state. In better-drained sandy areas, acidic podzols predominate. Crops are produced mainly on subarctic brown forest soils; these are rich in potassium but low in nitrogen and in organic matter.The official state soil is the Tanana series, which is shallow, well drained, moderately permeable, and derived from limestone weathering. It is a coarse loam, cryoturbated to a depth of up to.