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Chapter 14 Agriculture and Food Resources

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 14 Agriculture and Food Resources"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 14 Agriculture and Food Resources

2 Food Security Leftover grains Decreasing
Having access to adequate food Carryover stocks Leftover grains Decreasing 2006: lower grain harvest than previous two years

3 Food Security Consumption of animal products increasing
Environmental impacts? China Produces most wheat Largest importer of wheat

4 World Food Problems U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
852 million lack adequate food Developing countries Undernutrition Lack of calories WHO estimate182 million children under 5

5 World Food Problems Malnutrition Lack of calories or nutrients
3 billion worldwide Overnutrition Too many calories Animal saturated fats, sugar, salt United States

6 Population and World Hunger
86 countries Low income Food deficient Food insecurity Chronic hunger Malnutrition

7 Food Insecurity

8 World Hunger Causes Population growth Unequal food distribution
Poverty Solutions Control population Promote economic development

9 World Grain Production
Grain production doubled Grain per person did not increase

10 Poverty Most common cause of undernutrition and malnutrition
More common in rural areas Difficult problem to solve

11 Industrialized Agriculture
Modern agricultural methods Developed countries Inputs Capital Energy Chemicals High yields

12 Subsistence Agriculture
Traditional agricultural methods Developing countries Food for family Inputs Labor Land

13 Shifting Cultivation Subsistence agriculture
Grow crops, then leave land alone Slash-and-burn agriculture Clear forest Grow crops Soil loses productivity quickly Supports small populations

14 Nomadic Herding Subsistence agriculture Land not suitable for crops
Livestock continually move Why?

15 Intercropping Subsistence agriculture Variety of crops in same field
Polyculture Plants mature at different times Different crops harvested throughout the year

16 Agricultural Challenges
Loss of prime farmland Loss of domesticated varieties Improving yields Curbing environmental impacts

17 Loss of Agricultural Land
More than 400,000 acres lost per year in U.S. Suburban sprawl Conservation easements 1996 Farm Bill Protect farmland 30+ years

18 Loss of Domestic Varieties
Farmers using fewer varieties of plants and animals Modern methods Uniformity Maximum production Loss of genetic diversity Save germplasm Tissues May need later

19 Increasing Crop Yields
Food production has increased Green revolution Mid-20th century Modern methods High-yield varieties Chemicals

20 High-Yield Varieties Done with breeding and biotechnology

21 Green Revolution Benefits Mexico increased wheat production
Indonesia self-sufficient in rice Problems Developing countries dependent on chemicals, machinery High energy costs Too many chemicals

22 Increasing Crop Yields
Demand for grains will increase Can’t increase amount of land Yields can only increase so much Genetic engineering could help Developing countries will need better farming methods

23 Increasing Livestock Yields
Hormones Promote faster growth European Union limits imports of hormone-treated beef: why? Antibiotics Animals grow larger (4 – 5%) Resistant bacteria WHO wants them eliminated U.S. still using

24 Environmental Impacts
Air, water pollution Feedlot agriculture is the norm

25 Environmental Impacts
Pesticides Resistance Farmers use more Residues on food Land degradation Loss of productivity Salinization Habitat fragmentation

26 Environmental Impacts

27 Looking Towards The Future
Food requirements have been met Environmental problems increasing More food will be needed Vicious circle???

28 Sustainable Agriculture
Maintains soil productivity: conservation techniques Healthy ecological balance Minimal long-term impacts Natural fertilizers

29 Sustainable Agriculture
Less chemicals and antibiotics Water and energy conservation Diverse crops

30 Sustainable Agriculture
Organic agriculture No non-natural chemicals No genetic engineering View the farm as an agroecosystem Second green revolution!

31 Genetic Engineering Move genes from one species to another
Could improve agriculture

32 Potential Benefits of GM Crops
Decrease nutritional deficiencies worldwide: Golden Rice Decreased use of pesticides Heartier plants Feed the world More productive farm animals Better animal vaccines

33 Potential Drawbacks of GM Crops
Cross-pollination with native species Widespread crop failure Food allergies Long-term impacts unknown

34 Controlling Agricultural Pests
Pest: interferes with human welfare or activities Pesticides Help control pests Insecticides Herbicides Fungicides Rodenticides

35 Pesticides Perfect pesticide Narrow-spectrum
Kills only intended organism Breaks down rapidly Stays where applied Doesn’t exist! Broad-spectrum Kills variety of organisms Many used today

36 Benefits of Pesticides
Quick, effective control Protect crops Save lives

37 Problems With Pesticides
Genetic resistance 520 insect species resistant 84 weed species resistant Bioaccumulation Biomagnification

38 Problems With Pesticides
Affect non-target species New pests may emerge

39 Problems With Pesticides
Don’t stay put Pollute water, soil, air ≈ 14 million in U.S. have drinking water with traces of herbicides

40 Alternatives to Pesticides
Biological controls Use naturally occurring organisms Pheromones Hormones Genetics Irradiation

41 Alternatives to Pesticides

42 Integrated Pest Management
Combination of control methods Keep crop loss to economically tolerable level Sustainable agriculture Management vs. eradication Education critical On the increase

43 Case Study: DDT and the Bald Eagle
1963: 417 pairs left in lower 48 states Three reasons the population dropped?

44 Case Study: DDT and the Bald Eagle
1972: DDT banned Bald Eagle Protection Act Endangered Species Act Conservation efforts 2007: more than 7000 nesting pairs in lower 48 Removed from Threatened List


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