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Food Resources What are the Issues?. Types of Agriculture Industrialized –High input –Industrialized countries Plantation –Monoculture for export –Fair.

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Presentation on theme: "Food Resources What are the Issues?. Types of Agriculture Industrialized –High input –Industrialized countries Plantation –Monoculture for export –Fair."— Presentation transcript:

1 Food Resources What are the Issues?

2 Types of Agriculture Industrialized –High input –Industrialized countries Plantation –Monoculture for export –Fair Trade Traditional Subsistence –China, Northern Africa Traditional Intensive –Increased input

3 Types of Agriculture Industrialized Agriculture 1.Nestle 2.Cargill 3.Kraft 4.Unilever 5.Tyson Pesticides and Seeds –Monsanto –DuPont Animal Feed and Transportation –ADM and Cargill

4 A Little History Corporations a collection of many individuals united into one body, under a special denomination, having perpetual succession under an artificial form, and vested, by policy of the law, with the capacity of acting, in several respects, as an individual… Patenting Legislation –H.R 2749 Food Safety Bill

5 Objectives Explain the challenge of feeding the growing human population Identify goals, methods and impacts of the green revolution Explain the science behind GMF’s and discuss the associated debate Provide the various ways we can increase food production acknowledging the pros and cons Argue the benefits and drawbacks of subsidies

6 World Population Growth Current population 6.2 billion –Annual growth rate of 1.1% Projected poopulation in 2050 – 9 billion How will these people be fed?

7 Nutrition Malnutrition –Kwashiorkor –Marasmus –Under nutrition Over nutrition Micronutrient deficiencies

8 Types of Agriculture Industrialized –High input –Industrialized countries Plantation –Monoculture for export –Fair Trade Traditional Subsistence –China, Northern Africa Traditional Intensive –Increased input

9 Green Revolution What is the green revolution? What are the characteristics? What are the pros? What are the cons?

10 The Green Revolution Characteristics –High input –Decreased land use –High yield Three Steps –Monoculture development and planting –High input of fertilizer, water, and pesticide –Multiple cropping

11 Monocultures What are monocultures and why use them? Rice Wheat Corn Why use them? –Selected for disease resistance characteristics and high yields –Increased planting and harvesting efficiency increasing output

12 Second Green Revolution Import of industrial techniques to developing countries –High input –High yield monoculture varieties

13 Environmental Effects of Industrial Agriculture Loss of Biodiversity Soil Erosion Air pollution – increase CO2 Degradation of water quality Human health

14 Case Study India

15 World Grain Production Since 1985 Production has leveled off Per capita production has declined Global production increase of nearly 300% Per capita production rose nearly 36%

16 Increasing World Food Production Genetic Engineering New Foods Irrigation of New Land Urban Farming

17 Genetic Engineering Genetic modification of food and livestock Desired traits: –Rapid growth –High nutritional content –Mold or fungus resistance Controversy

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19 New Foods Giant water bugs, cockraoches Winged bean or Krill –High protein food sources –Low trophic level reduces energy use Perennials

20 Irrigation Aquifers Inefficient use of supplied water Leads to soil salinization Competition for water resources –California Aqueduct

21 Meat Production Range land and environmental impact Energy requirements

22 Energy Requirements

23 Energy Conversion

24 Fish Ocean harvesting Fish farming - aquaculture

25 Sustainable Agriculture Polyculture crops Organic fertilizers Irrigation efficiency Perennial crops Crop rotation

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27 Different kind of 'malnutrition’. The distended stomach of Kwashiorkor (ie severe protein malnutrition in children) is due to the very low levels of albumin in the blood. This causes fluid to accumulate in the abdomen and in the legs, in association with extreme lethargy. No Grimsby Chum would have been that malnourished. So the skeletons will have shown possible signs of rickets (Vitamin D deficiency) and/or stunted growth (ie long bones not as long, etc). These are not the same type of findings as would be associated with abdominal distension from malnutrition


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