Producing Enough Food for the World

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 12 Food, Soil, and Pest Management
Advertisements

Chapter 15/14 Soil Resources. Soil  Uppermost layer of Earth’s crust that supports plants, animals and microbes  Soil Forming Factors  Parent Material.
Chapter 11 Feeding the World.
Effects of Agriculture on the Environment
Feeding the world involves soil and water resources, food production, social and cultural issues, food distribution and environmental impacts 1.
Feeding the world involves soil and water resources, food production, social and cultural issues, food distribution and environmental impacts.
Lesson 9: Agriculture and Environment Big Question: Can We Feed the World Without Destroying the Environment?
12-3 What Environmental Problems Arise from Food Production?
Chapter 10 Food, Soil & Pest Management. Food Sources Cropland – 77% –30,000 plant species –Wheat, rice & corn Rangeland – 16% –Beef, pork, sheep & poultry.
By Ali Brooks and Sarah Anderson.  Agro forestry- crops and trees are grown together.  Alley cropping- see agro forestry  Aquaculture- raising and.
Food and Agriculture Chapter 15.
Chapter 12: Effects of Agriculture on the Environment.
Effects of Agriculture on the Environment
Chapter 12: Effects of Agriculture on the Environment
Effects of Agriculture on the Environment
Chapter 11: Agriculture, Aquaculture and the Environment
Can We Feed the World? To answer this we must understand how crops grow and how productive they can be. Most viable of human activities but is it sustainable?
Ch. 11 – Producing Enough Food for the World Case Study: Food for China.
CHAPTER 6 HUMANS IN THE BIOSPHERE
Humans in the Biosphere
Food and Agriculture Chapter 15.
Chapter 12: Farming and the Environment. How Agriculture Changes the Environment Agriculture one of our greatest triumphs and sources of environmental.
Crops and Soil Chapter 15 Section Two
Effects of Agriculture on the Environment
Chapter 12: Effects of Agriculture on the Environment.
Feeding the World Chapter 14 Feeding the World Chapter 14.
ECOSYSTEMS AND AGROECOSYSTEMS 6/09/2010. Definition Individual (species) Population Community Ecosystem Landscape.
LEQ- How has agriculture evolved over the years? Warm-Up- In your journal respond to the following: What do you know about industrialized agriculture?
Chapter 11 Producing Enough Food for the World.
Agriculture and the Environment July 21, Can We Feed the World?
Define SoilWhat are the five factors that influence soil formation? What makes up soil?What is physical weathering? What is chemical weathering? What are.
Chapter 12: Effects of Agriculture on the Environment.
Food Resources What are the Issues?. Types of Agriculture Industrialized –High input –Industrialized countries Plantation –Monoculture for export –Fair.
Resources. What are Resources? Humans are most consistently impacting their environment through their quest for resources. – The types of resources are.
Do Now: Identify and discuss 2 factors that may limit food production in the future.
I. Agriculture & Soil A.Basic process of farming: 1.Plowing 2. Fertilization 3. Irrigation 4. Pest Control B. Fertile soil – Soil that supports the growth.
Agriculture: Part 2 Increasing food production. © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP Green Revolutions: increasing crop yields per unit area First Green.
Cover crop Crop planted between harvesting and next season’s planting Normally nitrogen-fixing Prevents erosion.
Crops and Soil Environmental Science Chapter 15 Section 1.
 Negative impact on soil, air, water, and biodiversity resources  Humans and human health also negatively impacted  Negative aspects cost US $
Feeding the World Chapter Human Nutrition  humans need energy to carry out life processes  Growth  Movement  Tissue repair  humans are omnivores.
Food Resources Topic 3 The Soil System and Food Production Students will be able to: -to discuss the links that exist between social systems and food production.
Producing Enough Food for the World:
THE EARTH’S RESOURCES AND POLLUTION. Soil Degradation Scientist’ studies and the experiences of farmers have shown that the most productive soil, or the.
Food Production. How is food produced? Industrial Agriculture Traditional Agriculture.
15-2 Crops and Soil Page 384. A. Fertile Soil: The Living Earth 1. Soil must be fertile to produce healthy plants.
Environmental Problems With Food Production Ch. 12.
Food – a resource. Why is food important? 1)Source of energy 2)Source of materials for building new cells & structures **malnourishment can lead to other.
Review: Effects of Agriculture on the Environment.
Feeding the World.  Chronic under nutrition -means not consuming enough calories to be healthy  Malnourished- is regardless of calories.
1 CfE Higher Biology Food Supply. 2 Key areas: 3.1a Food Supply i) Food security and sustainable food production. ●Increase in human population and concern.
Chapter 6: Humans In The Biosphere Chapter 6 Section 1: A Changing Landscape Human activities greatly affect the ____________. Examples include:
LEQ- How has agriculture evolved over the years?
Land Management.
Chapter 11 Feeding the World.
Chapter Fifteen: Food and Agriculture
Chapter 12: Effects of Agriculture on the Environment
Food Resources and Pesticides
Producing Enough Food for the World
Soil as a System.
Agriculture, Aquaculture and the Environment
Chapter 12 Soil and Agriculture.
Chapter 6 Humans in the Biosphere
Farming Methods Conventional agriculture- industrial agriculture where labor is reduced and machinery is used. Traditional farming- still used in the developing.
Producing Enough Food for the World:
Producing Enough Food for the World
Effects of Agriculture on the Environment
Soil and Agriculture 12 CHAPTER
Land Use.
Land Vocabulary.
Presentation transcript:

Producing Enough Food for the World Chapter 11 Producing Enough Food for the World

Crops Rangeland: Pasture: Provides food for grazing and browsing animals without plowing and planting Pasture: Plowed, planted and harvested to provide forage for animals

Aquaculture Aquaculture Mariculture The farming of food in aquatic habitats Mariculture The farming of ocean fish

Six Ways Agroecosystems Differ from Natural Ecosystems Try to stop ecological succession and keep the agroecosystem in an early successional state Monoculture: Large areas planted with a single species Crops are planted in neat rows Farming greatly simplifies biological diversity Plowing is unlike any natural soil disturbance Genetic modification of crops.

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 Chemicals 1. Macronutirents 2. Micronutirents Synergistic Effects: a change in availability of one resource affects the response of an organism to some other resource

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

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

Organic Farming 3 Qualities It is more like natural ecosystems than monocultures It minimizes negative environmental impacts The food that results from it does not contain artificial compounds

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.

Effects of Agriculture on the Environment Chapter 12 Effects of Agriculture on the Environment

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

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.

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

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

Farming Crisis in India/ Vandana Shiva https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Av6dx9yNiCA https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vi1FTCzDSck https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGA7HDTkivI http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/23/world/asia/after-farmers-commit-suicide-debts-fall-on-families-in-india.html?_r=0

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

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

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