Chapter 11 Producing Enough Food for the World.

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Chapter 11 Producing Enough Food for the World

Transcript of Chapter 11 Producing Enough Food for the World.

Page 1: Chapter 11 Producing Enough Food for the World.

Chapter 11

Producing Enough Food for the World

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Crops

Rangeland:

Provides food for grazing and browsing animals without plowing and planting

Pasture:

Plowed, planted and harvested to provide forage for animals

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Aquaculture

• Aquaculture– The farming of food in aquatic habitats

• Mariculture– The farming of ocean fish

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Six Ways Agroecosystems Differ from Natural Ecosystems

1. Try to stop ecological succession and keep the agroecosystem in an early successional state

2. Monoculture: Large areas planted with a single species

3. Crops are planted in neat rows

4. Farming greatly simplifies biological diversity

5. Plowing is unlike any natural soil disturbance

6. Genetic modification of crops.

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Limiting Factors• Limiting Factor: The single requirement for

growth available in the least supply in comparison to the need of an organism

2 Types of Life-Important Chemicals1. Macronutirents2. Micronutirents

Synergistic Effects: a change in availability of one resource affects the response of an organism to some other resource

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Permaculture• Permaculture is a branch of ecological design, ecological engineering,

environmental design, construction and integrated water resources management that develops sustainable architecture, regenerative and self-maintained habitat and agricultural systems modeled from natural ecosystems

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Increasing the Yield per Acre

1. The Green Revolution

- Programs that have led to the development of new strains of crops with higher yields, better resistance to disease or better ability to grow under poor conditions

2. Improved Irrigation

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Organic Farming

3 Qualities1. It is more like natural ecosystems than

monocultures

2. It minimizes negative environmental impacts

3. The food that results from it does not contain artificial compounds

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Genetically Modified Food• Genetically Modified Crops are modified

by genetic engineers to produce higher crop yields and increase resistance to drought, cold, heat, toxins, plant pests and disease.

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Chapter 12

Effects of Agriculture on the Environment

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Many environmental problems result from agriculture:

• Soil erosion • Sediment transport

and deposition downstream

• On-site pollution from fertilizers and pesticides

• Deforestation

• Desertification• Degradation of water

aquifers• Salinization• Accumulation of toxic

metals and organic compounds

• Loss of biodiversity

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Where Eroded Soil Goes: Sediments Also Cause Environmental Problems

Ways to slow erosion:

• Making Soil Sustainable

• Contour Plowing

• No-Till Agriculture– Combination of farming practices that include

not plowing the land and using herbicides to keep down weeds.

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Integrated Pest Management

– Control of agricultural pests using several methods together, including biological and chemical agents

– Goals:• To minimize the use of artificial chemicals

• To prevent or slow the buildup of resistance by pests to chemical pesticides

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The Terminator Gene

• A genetically modified crop which has a gene to cause the plant to become sterile after the first year

• Is it really available? It is debateable.– Monsanto denies– Farmers suspect

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Grazing on Rangelands

• Overgrazing occurs when the carrying capacity is exceeded. It can cause severe damage to lands

• It is important to properly manage livestock, including using appropriate lands for gazing and keeping livestock at a sustainable density

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Desertification

• Desertification is the deterioration of land in arid, semi- arid and dry sub humid areas due to changes in climate and human activities

• Can be caused by– Poor farming practices– Conversion of marginal grazing lands to

croplands

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Carrying capacity of pasture and rangeland in the United StatesAverage # of cows per square kilometer