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Feeding the World

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Feeding the World Chapter 14 Feeding the World Chapter 14 14.1 Human Nutrition Macronutrients provide energy to body. Ex. Carbohydrates, proteins, and fats. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Feeding the World


1
Feeding the World
Feeding the World
Chapter 14
  • Chapter 14

2
14.1 Human Nutrition
  • Macronutrients provide energy to body.
  • Ex. Carbohydrates, proteins, and fats.
  • Micronutrients provide the body with small
    amounts of chemicals needed for biochemical
    reactions.

3
  • Humans need energy to carry out their life
    processes.
  • Kilocalorie (Kcal)
  • unit of measurement

  • for the energy contained with in
    macronutrients.

4
  • Humans are omnivores (plant and animal)
  • Human diets should include more vegetables than
    meats.

5
Nutrition
  • There are 8 Essential Amino Acids that must be
    obtained by food.
  • Carbohydrates provide the body with the
    quickest source of energy.
  • EX. Bread, grain, or veggies
  • Foods with complex carbohydrates are starches.

6
Malnutrition
  • Caused by the lack of a specific nutrient.
  • A healthy vegetarian diet includes protein from a
    combination of grains and legumes (soy, bean,
    peanuts).
  • Foods that come
  • from plants usually
  • lack some essential
  • amino acids.

7
14.2 World Food Supply
  • More food is available per person than at any
    point in history.

8
The Green Revolution
  • refers to a series of research, development, and
    initiatives, occurring between the 1940s and the
    late 1970s, that increased agriculture production
    around the world, beginning most markedly in the
    late 1960s.

9

The Green Revolution Characteristic
  1. Development of new strains of wheat and rice, the
    two main foods of the world.

10
The Green Revolution Characteristic
  • 2. Faster growth, resistance to disease, climate
    diversity.

11
The Green Revolution Characteristic
  • 3. Crop yields can increase as much as 4 times
    the normal yield.

12
The Green Revolution Characteristic
  • 4. Fertilizers and Modern Machinery.

13
The Green Revolution Problem
  • Poor farmers cant afford these advances so they
    dont make as much money for their product.

14
Cash Crops
  • A crop grown for the purpose of sale.
  • Developing countries would rather export crops
    for livestock than provide food for their
    starving nation.
  • Money is used to support government (weapons and
    political leaders).

15
Food from the Water
  • Increased harvesting of ocean fish has led to
    endangerment of fish species.
  • Aquaculture involves the controlled commercial
    production of fish and mollusks.
  • An alternative to fishing in the open oceans for
    food is to raise fish in confined pools.

16
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18
Fish Farm
Fish Farm
19
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20
14.3 Improving Modern Farming Techniques
  • Modern farming 1 farmer can feed 78 people, 1850
    1 farmer could feed 5.
  • Industrialized Agriculture (I.A.)
  • Highly efficient and
  • productive.
  • I.A. uses large amounts of energy, pesticides,
    and fertilizers.
  • Agribusinesses Farms run by large corporations.

21
  • Large fossil fuels consuming equipment replaced
    human powered tools.

22
  • Agribusinesses have several stages
  • food production
  • packaging
  • transport.

23
Modern Farming Techniques
  • Monoculture
  • growing one or two
  • crops instead of a
  • variety.
  • High amounts of
  • pesticides and fertilizers were necessary due to
    the single crop. Growing only one crop drains
    the soil and attracts a high concentration of
    pests..

24
Problems with Modern Farming Techniques
  • Plants are vulnerable to the same diseases
  • Mineral depletion from the soil
  • Soil ability is reduced which decreases the crop
    yield.
  • Overusing pesticides has lead to insect
    resistance

25
Modern Farming Techniques
26
Historic Farming Techniques
27
14.4 Sustainable Agriculture
  • Sustainable Agriculture
  • crop rotation, reduced
  • soil erosion, integrated
  • pest management,
  • and a minimal use
  • of soil additives.

28
Some Methods of Sustainable Agriculture
  1. Crop rotation changing crop on a regular cycle.
    1 6 Years to prevent the minerals from
    becoming depleted from the soil.
  2. Cover Crops nonfood plants grown between
    growing seasons.
  3. Return nitrogen naturally and prevent erosion.

29
Some Negative Effects of Non-sustainable
techniques
  • Soil Erosion
  • Deforestation
  • Desertification
  • Hunger
  • War

30
Reducing Erosion
  1. Natural process by which valuable topsoil and
    nutrients are carried away.
  2. Drip irrigation delivers small quantities of
    water at the root, reducing erosion by water.
  3. Reduced tilling can increase crop yields.
  4. Extensive tilling is beneficial to the soil, but
    it increases erosion from water and wind.

31
Erosion
32
Pest Management
  1. IPM Integrated
    Pest Management
  2. Reduces pesticides by as much as 90.
  3. Natural Predators Wasps, ladybugs, and a
    variety of viruses and bacteria.
  4. Insects were becoming immune to insecticides and
    crops were suffering.
  5. Farmers using IPM have higher crop yields.
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