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Food, Soil, and Pest Management

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Food, Soil, and Pest Management Chapter 12 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Food, Soil, and Pest Management


1
Food, Soil, and Pest Management
  • Chapter 12

2
12-1 What Is Food Security and Why Is It
Difficult to Attain?
  • Concept 12-1A Many of the poor suffer health
    problems from chronic lack of food and poor
    nutrition, while many people in developed
    countries have health problems from eating too
    much food.
  • Concept 12-1B The greatest obstacles to
    providing enough food for everyone are poverty,
    political upheaval, corruption, war, and the
    harmful environmental effects of food production.

3
Many of the Poor Have Health Problems Because
They Do Not Get Enough to Eat
  • Food security means that every person in a
    given area has daily access to enough nutritious
    food to have an active and healthy life.
  • Global food production has stayed ahead of
    population growth.
  • However
  • One of six people in developing countries cannot
    grow or buy the food they need.
  • Food insecurity living with chronic hunger and
    poor nutrition.

4
Key Nutrients for a Healthy Human Life
  • We need large amounts of macronutrients
  • (protein, carbohydrates, and fats)
  • We also need smaller amounts of micronutrients
  • (vitamins such as A,C, and E and various minerals)

5
Many People Suffer from Chronic Hunger and
Malnutrition
  • Some people cannot meet their basic energy needs
  • Chronic undernutrition or hunger
  • Others lack proteins and key nutrient needs
  • Chronic malnutrition
  • The root cause of hunger and malnutrition is
    poverty.
  • In 2006, 862 million were undernourished
    worldwide.
  • A 2005 estimate says 6 million children die
    annually from undernutrition or nonfatal diseases
    made worse by their poor diet.

6
Many People Do No Get Enough Vitamins and
Minerals
  • One in three people has a deficiency of one or
    more vitamins and minerals, especially
  • iron anemia
  • vitamin A blindness
  • iodine goiter or enlarged thyroid gland
  • Can lead to deafness
  • Famine a shortage of food in an area along with
    mass starvation, economic and social chaos
  • Usually caused by crop failures from drought,
    flooding, war, or other catastrophic events

7
Many People Have Health Problems from Eating Too
Much
  • Overnutrition excess calories and lack of
    exercise can lead to reduced life quality, poor
    health, and premature deathsame as
    undernutrition
  • A 2005 Boston University study
  • 60 of American adults are overweight
  • 33 are obese
  • Americans spend 42 billion a year
    trying to lose weight.
  • Estimates are that 24 billion per year would
    eliminate world hunger.

8
12-2 How Is Food Produced?
  • Concept 12-2A We have sharply increased crop
    production using a mix of industrialized and
    traditional agriculture.
  • Concept 12-2B We have used industrialized and
    traditional methods to greatly increase supplies
    of meat, fish, and shellfish.

9
Food Production Has Increased Dramatically
  • Wheat, rice, and corn provide more than half of
    the worlds consumed calories
  • Fish and shellfish are an important source of
    food for about 1 billion people mostly in Asia
  • Of all the biodiversity on the planet, only 14
    plant and 9 animal species make up 90 of the
    worlds consumed calories.

10
Food Production Has Increased Dramatically
  • Three systems produce most of our food
  • Grain from croplands 77
  • Meat from rangelands, pastures, and feedlots 16
  • Fish from fisheries/Aquaculture 7
  • Dramatic increase in global food production since
    1960.
  • Why?
  • Technological advances
  • More sophisticated farming techniques
  • Expanded use of inorganic chemical fertilizers,
    irrigation, pesticides, high-yield crops
  • Intense farming methods, densely populated
    feedlots, breeding/growing pens, aquaculture
    ponds or ocean cages

11
Two Types of Agriculture
  • Industrial Agriculture (High Input Agriculture)
  • A relatively small group of farmers produce large
    quantities of a single crop or livestock
  • Mostly in developed countries
  • Traditional Agriculture (Low Input Agriculture)
  • Traditional subsistence agriculture
  • Produces enough crops or livestock to feed family
  • Traditional intensive agriculture
  • Produces enough crops or livestock to feed the
    farmers family and maybe some to sell
  • Mostly in developing countries

12
Industrialized Crop Production Relies on
High-Input Monocultures
  • About 80 of the worlds food supply is produced
    by industrialized agriculture.
  • Goal is to steadily increase crop yield
  • Uses large amounts of fossil fuel energy, water,
    commercial fertilizers, and pesticides to produce
    monocultures.
  • Plantation agriculture primarily in tropical
    developing countries (bananas, coffee, sugarcane)
  • Cash crops crops intended for sale, not
    consumption or animals

13
Traditional Agriculture Often Relies on
Low-Input Polycultures
  • Many farmers in developing countries grow a
    variety of crops on the same plot of land
  • Polyculture different plants are grown together
  • Limited technology, limited equipment, limited
    impact on the environment
  • Slash-and-burn agriculture burning underbrush
    to provide nutrients to the soil

14
A Closer Look at Industrialized Crop Production
  • The Green Revolution represents the 88 increase
    in food production per unit of area since 1950.
  • Monocultures of high-yield key crops
  • Selectively breed or genetically engineered crops
  • Large inputs of fertilizers, pesticides, water
  • The Second Green Revolution involves fast growing
    rice/wheat bred for tropical regions.
  • Early in the century, one American farmer could
    produce food for 2.5 people.
  • By 1999, a single farmer could feed over 130
    people.

15
A Closer Look at Industrialized Crop Production
  • Since 1950, high-input agriculture has produced
    more crops per unit of land.
  • Grain production has tripled during this
    timeframe
  • Why has per Capita grain production gone down
    since the early 1980s?

16
Crossbreeding and Genetic Engineering Can Produce
New Crop Varieties
  • Gene Revolution increased crop yields, as a
    result of mixing organisms genes
  • Artificial selection has been used for centuries
    to develop genetically improved varieties of
    crops.
  • Genetic engineering develops improved strains at
    an exponential pace compared to artificial
    selection.
  • Add beneficial genes
  • Delete negative genes

17
Crossbreeding and Genetic Engineering Can Produce
New Crop Varieties
  • Age of Genetic Engineering
  • developing crops that are resistant to
  • Heat and cold
  • Herbicides
  • Insect pests
  • Viral diseases
  • Drought
  • Salty or acidic soil
  • Controversy has arisen over the use of
    genetically modified foods (GMFs).
  • Critics fear that we know too little about the
    long-term potential harm to human health and the
    environment.

18
Meat Production and Consumption Have Grown
Steadily
  • Meat production increased fourfold from 19612007
  • Industrialized livestock production
  • Densely populated feedlots are common
  • System uses a lot of energy and water and produce
    huge amounts of animal waste

19
Industrialized Meat Production Has Harmful
Environmental Consequences
20
Fish and Shellfish Production Have Increased
Dramatically
  • Aquaculture raising large numbers of fish and
    shellfish in ponds and cages
  • worlds fastest growing type of food production.
  • Fish farming involves cultivating fish in a
    controlled environment and harvesting them in
    captivity.

21
Producing Fish Through Aquaculture Can Harm
Aquatic Ecosystems
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