Welcome to the Kerr Center A private non-profit educational foundation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
We do it the Green Way !. A road to a sustainable company.
Advertisements

Food. F2 Food F2 Industrial Agricultural: Key Elements Machines Economies of Scale Synthetic Inputs.
Looking at Agricultural Sustainability
Applications of sustainability on the farm. Examples of sustainable practices on the farm: Practices which protect and improve soils, conserve, recycle.
Chapter 12 Food, Soil, and Pest Management
Future trends of commercial agriculture in this region.
PROTECTING FOOD RESOURCES: PEST MANAGEMENT
Crops and Soil Arable land is farmland that can be used to grow crops.
Agriculture Chapter 12 Section 3.
Agriculture Biodiversity in CDB and Cartagena Protocol
Sustainable Agriculture
The Value of Native Ecosystems
Agriculture For the last 10,000 years humans have been practicing agriculture, or simply put, farming. Farming has allowed us to feed many people and have.
1 Pest Control. 2 Pests  Biological Pests –any species that competes with us for food, invades lawns and gardens, destroys food, and spreads disease.
What is Soil? Soil Contains Minerals and Organic Matter
By Ali Brooks and Sarah Anderson.  Agro forestry- crops and trees are grown together.  Alley cropping- see agro forestry  Aquaculture- raising and.
Looking at Agricultural Sustainability Sustainable Small Farming & Ranching Understanding “Sustainability” and “Whole Farm” Concepts.
Environmental Stewardship & & Every Day of Every Year Caring for the Earth AGRICULTURE GA Ag Ed Curriculum Office To accompany Georgia Agriculture Education.
Next End. organic farming NextEnd Previous Organic farming is a system which avoids or largely excludes the use of synthetic inputs (such as fertilizers,
Food and Agriculture Chapter 15.
Organic Farming a Modern Day’s Devlopement
HUMANS IN THE BIOSPHERE. A Changing Landscape  Growing populations depend on the limited natural resources of earth for survival.  Humans rely on ecological.
Agriculture For the last 10,000 years humans have been practicing agriculture, or simply put, farming. Farming has allowed us to feed many people and have.
Organic Farming: An Overview Prepared by: L. Robert Barber, & Ilene Iriarte For: Guam Cooperative Extension Service & Guam Department of Agriculture Funding.
SUSTAINABLE ORGANIC FARMING S MAKHIJA Strategic Advisor & VP Jain Irrigation Systems Ltd, Jalgaon.
1. Natural Resources Conservation Service Strategic Plan Strategic Plan
2014 Envirothon Sustainable agriculture systems and organic farming Northeast Organic Farming Association of New Jersey | 334 River Rd, Hillsborough, NJ.
Understanding the basics of organic gardening Garden Education Experiment October 1.
Feeding the World Chapter 14 Feeding the World Chapter 14.
Applications of sustainability on the farm Sustainable Small Farming and Ranching.
LEQ- How has agriculture evolved over the years? Warm-Up- In your journal respond to the following: What do you know about industrialized agriculture?
1 Feeding the 10 Billion The future of Land, Yields and Inputs.
Bellringer EXPLAIN IN COMPLETE SENTENCES WHAT ARE ORGANIC FARMING METHODS.
Diversity on Your Table Case Study – The Corn Crisis of 1970
Sustainable Agriculture UNIT 1 – SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Fruit & Vegetable Production Unit for Plant Science Core Curriculum Lesson 4: Integrated Pest Management Fruit & Vegetable Production Unit for Plant Science.
Food Resources. Food in the World 30,000 plant species with parts people can eat 15 plants and 8 animals supply 90% of our food Wheat, rice, and corn.
“Organic farming is a system which avoids or largely excludes the use of synthetic inputs (such as fertilizers, pesticides, hormones, feed additives etc)
AGRICULTURE The growing of plants and raising of domesticated animals.
Unit 1: Introduction to Agriculture. Objectives 1.1 Define terminology 1.2 Determine the impact of agriculture on Arkansas' economy. (rice, soybeans,
How farming affects parts of an ecosystem. Review questions Where does our food come from? How is our food supply dependent of ecosystems? How do current.
 Negative impact on soil, air, water, and biodiversity resources  Humans and human health also negatively impacted  Negative aspects cost US $
What are the pros and cons of pesticide use? Pros- Cons- 1. kills insects 1. Threaten human health 2. kills weeds 2. Pollute ecosystems 3. kills other.
Genetically modified crops and foods have advantages and disadvantages.
What type of land is used for farming?
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Copyright © 2008.
ORGANIC FARMING IAFNR Plant and Soil Sciences Module.
Agriculture Unit Notes. Food and Nutrition Foods humans eat are composed of several major types of biological molecules necessary to maintain health :
Benefits of Biodiversity Section 3. Does Biodiversity Matter?  Scientists have offered a number of concrete, tangible reasons for preserving biodiversity.
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.
A POLICYMAKER’S GUIDE TO THE SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION OF SMALLHOLDER CROP PRODUCTION.
Using Plants Sustainably. Sustainable Agriculture in Canada The two main agricultural practices used by Canadian farmers to increase crop yields are the.
LEQ- How has agriculture evolved over the years?
Land Management.
Soil and Organic Farming
Chapter Fifteen: Food and Agriculture
PRT 2008 Lecture 9.
The Green Revolution - Changing the Way We Eat
10 Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future of Food Part A
Chapter 12 Soil and Agriculture.
Pest Control.
Towards a Sustainable Agriculture
Sustainable Agriculture
Soil and Agriculture 12 CHAPTER
Soil, Agriculture, and the Future of Food
HUMAN IMPACT on the BIOSPHERE Part 1 A Changing Landscape
Organic vs. Conventional Production
Organic vs. Conventional Production
Presentation transcript:

Welcome to the Kerr Center A private non-profit educational foundation

Located 5 miles south of Poteau on highway 271

Established 1985 Sustainability became central to its mission Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

Unique: Kerr Farm & Ranch

What Kerr Center offers…. Online & in print In person, in Poteau

Organic Horticulture Sustainable Livestock Conservation

Publications

Current Special Initiatives Beginning Farmer and Rancher Training Program Resilient Farm (Organic) Project Intern Training Program Native Pollinator Project

So, how do you “do” sustainable agriculture?

In the 1990s Kerr Center identified 8 components of sustainable ag Healthy Soil Water Quality & Conservation Responsible Waste Management Adapted Crops

Biodiversity Ecological Pest Management Energy Conservation Profitability

Steps are Covered in this 2001 book:

1. Soil: Conserve and Create

Good Soil: The foundation of a sustainable agriculture Microorganisms in one spoonful of soil outnumber the people on earth Sustainable Ag Soil

Erosion: still a threat Erosion threatens the productive capacity of nearly one of every three cropland acres. ---Natural Resources Conservation Service

One solution: Keep the soil covered

Cover crops or green manures basis of Kerr Center’s organic program

Cover crops like vetch also add nitrogen, a key nutrient, to the soil.

George Kuepper, Horticulture Manager, mowing cover crop

The mowed material can be tilled in, or left on the surface as mulch.

We also create Healthy Soil with Compost

& compost tea...

2. Water: Conserve and Protect Its Quality

Riparian buffers on Kerr Ranch Buffers can trap 70-80% of sediment and contaminants in run off. Protecting Water Quality

Drip irrigation conserves water

3. Organic Wastes: Manage so They Don’t Pollute

Sustainable Agriculture Animals are raised on integrated farms Animal wastes provide nutrients for growing crops without polluting watersheds;

Animals on the move Free range chickensRotational grazing

4. Adapted to the Environment: Grow Locally-Adapted Breeds and Varieties

With large amounts of inputs, farmers can raise non-adapted crops Farmers raise animals and plants adapted to the existing environment Industrial Sustainable AgricultureAgriculture

Is Corn Adapted to the Oklahoma Panhandle?

: heirloom sweet potato variety trials...

Sweet potatoes are heat and drought tolerant

And well adapted to Oklahoma

Looking for the best tomato: Trials of heirloom varieties

Reports with results from all variety trials are available free online.

A Good Mix for Oklahoma Angus X Senepol Cattle Senepol are heat- adapted, and resistant to parasites. Angus have good carcass qualities. Adaptability—Sustainable Ag

Pineywoods cattle: hardy heritage breed

5. Encourage Biodiversity

Biodiversity Over 100 breeds of livestock and poultry are endangered in U.S. With important genetic traits: adaptability, hardiness, disease resistance Only 20 per cent of the maize varieties reported in Mexico in 1930 are now being grown

Biodiversity Threatened Monoculture-- planting fence row to fence row-- destroys habitat for native plants and wildlife

Saving space for wildlife on the Kerr Ranch Wildflower Meadows & Plots Provide Habitat for Diverse Pollinators

A native pollinator (sweat bee)

Wildlife on the ranch

Beneficial insects help control insect pests in hort plots.

Birds eat millions of insects and billions of weed seeds

Pests: Manage Them with Minimal Environmental Impact

Environmental Consequences of Overuse of Pesticides Resistance: 500 insect pests, 270 weed species, 150 diseases resulting in chemical treadmill Non-target pests often killed, too often beneficial predators Industrial Ag--Chemicals

Health Consequences Pesticide poisoning (worldwide) 10-20,000 deaths per year At least 3 million acute cases American farm workers the highest rate of chemical-related illness of any group Industrial Ag--Chemicals

Pesticide Use Rate of usage in agriculture more than doubled since 1964—3/4 of usage in U.S. Share of farm budget for pesticides rose 35 percent in same period Industrial Ag--Chemicals

.

Without herbicides, controlling bermudagrass is a challenge...

...but sorghum-sudangrass, a summer cover crop, outcompetes it

Energy: Conserve Nonrenewable Resources

Conserve fuel by using small-scale equipment

Solar-powered fencing

Profitability: Increase Profitability and Reduce Risk

Consumers are driving change

Farmers’ markets Farm-to-school Community gardens CSA farms Food cooperatives

Opportunities: Direct and local sales Higher per acre returns– horticulture crops Direct sales: farmers get 100% food dollar Attractive to young, women, minority and beginning farmers

Farmers’ Markets Increase Access to Healthy Foods, Affordable 70 Farmers’ Markets in Oklahoma (35 in 1007)

It’s Affordable! Selected produce price comparisons ($/lb.), (F.M. had lower prices on majority of items) Farmers' Market Wal-Mart Romaine Lettuce $0.76 $1.38 Turnips $0.91 $1.46 Green Onions $1.63 $3.26

Chickasaw Nation: Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program 85% ate more fresh produce than before. 45% bought a fruit or vegetable they had never tried before

80% will continue to shop at farmers’ market even without coupons 93% plan to continue to eat more fresh produce

Farm-to-School Makes healthy foods available to low-income kids Research says farm-to-school programs significantly improve eating habits 2007: 40 school districts in OK 2013: over 100 school districts

We Can Grow It in Oklahoma From A-Z, Asparagus to Zucchini

Consumers are the key to change Buying safe, nutritious, locally-produced food Be willing to pay a fair price for this food

WE NEED MORE FARMERS

Farmer Training at Kerr Center Beginning Farmer and Rancher Training Program Resilient Farmer Project Intern Training Program

2014

Intern Program

Tours: second Tuesday of each month

Tremendous Progress and Many Challenges

When you’re right, don’t run. Hoe your row out. Robert S. Kerr

Comments or Questions?