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HEY! Get out your objectives #4-12 for a stamp! Update your food journal for a stamp! Read the board!

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Presentation on theme: "HEY! Get out your objectives #4-12 for a stamp! Update your food journal for a stamp! Read the board!"— Presentation transcript:

1 HEY! Get out your objectives #4-12 for a stamp! Update your food journal for a stamp! Read the board!

2 Monoculture

3 Polyculture

4

5  Benefits:  Easy to manage  Provides uniformity  Can be grown by few people as long as they have large machines  Lack of diversity = potential loss of crop to disease/pest  Need for pesticides  Need for inorganic fertilizer because crop takes particular nutrient from soil  Loss of biodiversity from field edges/cover crops What are the tradeoffs of monoculture?

6 Genetic resistance and the pesticide treadmill

7  Benefits:  Easy to manage  Provides uniformity  Can be grown by few people as long as they have large machines  Lack of diversity = potential loss of crop to disease/pest  Need for pesticides  Need for inorganic fertilizer because crop takes particular nutrient from soil  Loss of biodiversity from field edges/cover crops What are the tradeoffs of monoculture?

8 Pests and diseases generally are plant-specific. Examples – Boll weevil attacks cotton plants Rust fungus attacks corn Yellow rust fungus attacks wheat

9 Each crop needs some of the same nutrients... Nitrogen Phosphorus Potassium Trace elements But each crop takes the same nutrients out of the soil each time it’s grown. Example: corn uses a LOT of nitrogen

10 So why do monocultures require lots of fertilizer?

11 What IS fertilizer? Synthetic/Inorganic fertilizer: Made from natural gas (a fossil fuel) Examples: – Miracle Gro – Ammonium nitrate – Scott’s turf builder Organic fertilizer Created from an ecological process or organism Examples: – Fish emulsion – Blood meal – Bone meal – compost

12 Fertilizer nutrients – what do those numbers mean? Nitrogen Phosphorus Potassium

13 Nitrogen cycle – Why is nitrogen so important? Present in all proteins (structural and enzymatic) and nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) Nitrogen atoms cycle through the environment just like water molecules!

14 Remember the water cycle?

15 Legumes are the stars!

16 These are legumes, too!

17 Rhizobium bacteria in nodules on legume roots start the cycle

18 The nitrogen cycle!

19 Let’s sum up! Answer Objectives #13-16 right now!

20 Houston, we have a problem (and it’s linked to fertilizers!)

21 Eutrophication Page 137

22 Eutrophication Obj #17 Each pair/tri needs a white board, 2 markers, and an eraser – send a runner now! Re-read the paragraph on artificial eutrophication. List the steps of eutrophication on obj #17. Compare your list with your neighbors Use your notes to draw a cartoon of the process on the white boards.

23 Plant nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) cause eutrophication

24 Other sources of plant nutrients Untreated sewage Manure from livestock Pet wastes

25

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27 Hypoxic zones “Dead zones” – form in the summer Gulf of Mexico

28

29 So what can YOU do?

30 Eutrophication Which pollutants are involved? What are the sources of these pollutants? Are these sources point or nonpoint sources? What are the effects of eutrophication? Why does the dead zone form in the Gulf near New Orleans? Why does the dead zone form in the summer? Why should we be worried about the dead zone?


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