THE GREEN REVOLUTION (The Third Agricultural Revolution)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The First Agricultural Revolution c. 10,000 BC
Advertisements

Environmental Science
Chapter 19 Food Resources
Food and AgricultureSection 1 Bellringer. Food and AgricultureSection 1 Objectives Identify the major causes of malnutrition. Compare the environmental.
Feeding the world involves soil and water resources, food production, social and cultural issues, food distribution and environmental impacts 1.
Human Population BIO 103 Human Ecology Dr. Phoebe Smith.
The Green Revolution. History and Development Norman Borlaug-American scientist. 1940s- conducting research in Mexico developed new disease-resistant.
The Green Revolution Bryan Chia Jun Qing (4) 3P2.
BIOLOGY 157: LIFE SCIENCE: AN ENVIRONMENTAL APPROACH (Energy needs: Food)
Green Revolution: Curse or Blessing? A. Development & Diffusion of Agriculture: Three agricultural revolutions: Neolithic Revolution 1. Neolithic Revolution.
Green revolution Done by: Derrick Toh (31) Dylan Fones Jin Kheng (4)
The Green Revolution IB Geography II.
Environmental Science Chapter 15 Section 1
Agricultural Revolutions
In simplest terms, agriculture Is an effort by man to move Beyond the limits set by nature.
I. Commercial Agriculture: the Anglo-Saxon model
The Green Revolution Began in the 1940s, 1950s –Was a phase of the 3 rd Revolution –Really implemented in 1970s, 1980s New strains of hybrid seeds and.
Population, Demography, and the Environment. Population (millions)
Super Review! Geosphere, Hydrosphere, Atmosphere, Biosphere.
How can all of the people in the world be fed????????????? Created by Ms. McFadden.
15.1 – Feeding the World.
Why study plants? (photosynthetic organisms) 1.Primary producers of bio-usable energy 2.Immortal (cellular level) 3.Used for food, shelter, natural products.
Food Resources What are the Issues?. Types of Agriculture Industrialized –High input –Industrialized countries Plantation –Monoculture for export –Fair.
UNIT 5 LESSON 8 Some of the information repeats from Lesson 7 (but this is the new and improved version)
Chapter 14 – Increasing Yields. Crop Yields  Worldwide cereal yields have more than doubled since the early 1960s.  What makes yields increase?  Productive.
Food Efficiency.  The effectiveness of different types of agriculture  Measures the quantity of food produced  In a given area  With limited energy.
Environmental Impacts Of Population Growth
The Green Revolution WHY ? Emerged out of a concern over population growth: Could agricultural production keep pace? WHAT ? The transformation of agriculture.
CHANGES IN FOOD PRODUCTION. THE GREEN REVOLUTION Launched by the FAO in the 1960’s to combat famine and malnutrition in the Developing world. To take.
Dairy farming Has become highly mechanized in recent years. Cows are hooked up to automated milking machines. The machines pump out the mild and store.
Feeding the World Chapter Human Nutrition  humans need energy to carry out life processes  Growth  Movement  Tissue repair  humans are omnivores.
THE GREEN REVOLUTION (The Third Agricultural Revolution)
Boserup, Malthus, and the Green Revolution
The Green Revolution How we have changed our food.
Food Production. How is food produced? Industrial Agriculture Traditional Agriculture.
Food Resources: A Challenge for Agriculture Chapter 19.
Agriculture, biotechnology, and the future of food Chapter 9.
The Green Revolution The role of technology in food production (and its role in reducing food shortages)
Agricultural Revolutions
How can all of the people in the world be fed?????????????
The Revolutions.
THE THREE AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTIONS
Thomas Malthus Agree or Disagree?.
The Green Revolution - Changing the Way We Eat
Agribusiness, Commodity Chains & Technology
What Is Agriculture?.
Note Pack Chapter 15 Food and Agriculture Section 1: Feeding the World
THE GREEN REVOLUTION (The Third Agricultural Revolution)
Feeding the World Food and Agriculture. Feeding the World Food and Agriculture.
Thomas Malthus and Overpopulation
Food and Agriculture.
Agricultural History.
Chapter 11 Review.
Food and Agriculture.
Section 1: Feeding the World
Unit 5 Review.
Section 1: Feeding the World
Food and Agriculture.
Green Revolution: Curse or Blessing?
Issues and Impacts of Agriculture
Geosphere, Hydrosphere, Atmosphere, Biosphere
Food Efficiency.
HISTORY OF AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
Land Use.
Agriculture in Canada 4/28/2019 1:06 PM
OBJECTIVE TWW be able to determine which potential solution to the world’s food issue is the most realistic by analyzing the elements of the Green.
How Did Agriculture Change with Industrialization?
Malthusian Theory on Overpopulation FRQ
Eras of Plant Improvement
Food and Agriculture.
Presentation transcript:

THE GREEN REVOLUTION (The Third Agricultural Revolution) And Biotechnology 1

THOMAS MALTHUS 19th century economist Believed that because population grows geometrically and food production arithmetically famine was inevitable. Slowing the growth of population was the only possibility to prevent starvation History (so far) has proven Malthus wrong . . . 2

3

4

INCREASE IN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION PER CAPITA 5

GREEN REVOLUTION A complex of improvements which greatly increased agricultural production Since 1950’s Greatest effect felt in LDCs Agricultural output outpaced population growth even without adding additional cropland Adoption of new, improved varieties of grains Application of better agricultural techniques Irrigation Mechanization Use of fertilizer Use of pesticides 6

Principal Beneficiaries of the Green Revolution RICE Thailand Vietnam Korea Indonesia WHEAT Mexico Egypt Turkey BOTH India China Pakistan 7

“Green Revolution”

“Green Revolution” drawbacks Favored farmers who could afford seeds, inputs, machines, irrigation Indebted farmers lost land, moved to cities New “monocrops” lacked resistance to disease/pests Environmental contamination, erosion Oriented to export “cash crops,” not domestic food

Biotechnology: Using organisms to… Make or modify products Improve plants or animals Develop new microorganisms Crossing natural divides between species Not just crossbreeding

Genetic Engineering

Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) Consumer concerns began in Europe, now in U.S. too

“FRANKENFOODS” 11

12

13

14

Bovine Growth Hormone (BGH)