Title: Where does our food come from?
1Where does our food come from?
- Croplands (mostly grain) provide 77 of the
worlds food - Rangelands (meat) supply 16
- Oceanic fisheries (fish and shellfish) 7
2How Is Food Produced?
- Sources of food
- Primary plants Wheat, corn, and rice
- Primary animalsfish, beef, pork, and chicken
- 14 plant and 8 animal species provide 90 of the
global food calories
3Major Types of Agriculture
- Industrialized agriculture
- Large amounts of fossil fuel, water, fertilizer,
and pesticides to produce monoculture crops or
livestock animals - Plantation
- Form of industrialized agriculture single
ownership - Traditional subsistence agriculture
- Produce only enough for the family
- Traditional intensive agriculture
- Increase outputs for profit
4Industrialized Agricultural Wastes and Land
Pollution
- Animal Confinement
- Waste runoff
- Overgrazing
- Increases soil erosion
- Sedimentation
- Nutrient application
- Irrigation
- Pesticides
5Waste runoff increases nutrients and pathogens in
streams
6Overgrazing typically strips the land of any
natural protection and leaves the soil very
susceptible to erosion
7Runoff carries sediments, nutrients and
pesticides into streams that damages fish habitat
8Agriculture alters native habitats and reduces
native biodiversity
9Major Types of Agriculture
- Plantation - Form of agriculture that involves
concentrated ownership of land with the means of
production in the hands of one family or
corporation, the use of hired labor, and
mono-crop production for sale. - Cash crops mostly for sale in developed countries
- Bananas, coffee, soybeans
10Traditional
Plantation
Industrialized
11World Food Production
Industrialized
Traditional
12Producing Food by Green-Revolution Techniques
- Since 1950, increase in global food production
has come from increased yields per unit area of
crop land.
13Producing Food by Green-Revolution Techniques
- Green revolution involves three steps
- High-input monoculture using selectively bred or
genetically-engineered crops - High yields using high inputs of fertilizer,
extensive use of pesticides and high inputs of
water - Multiple cropping increase the number of crops
grown per year on a plot of land.
14Green Revolutions
15Producing Food by Traditional Techniques
Interplanting simultaneously grow several crops
on the same ground. Reduces chance of losing
years crop to pests, bad weather, etc.
16Producing Food by Traditional Techniques
- Types of Interplanting
- Polyvarietal cultivation planting several
varieties of the same crop - Intercropping grow two or more different crops
at the same time (grainnitrogen fixing plant) - Agroforestry (alley cropping) crops and trees
are grown together - Polyculture many different types of plants that
mature at different times are grown together
17Causes of Soil Erosion
- Wind
- Water
- People farming, logging, construction (or any
activities that weaken root strength)
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19Soil erosion in a wheat field
20Global Soil Erosion
21Soil Degradation on Irrigated Land
- Salinization
- Waterlogging
22Reducing and Cleaning Up Salinization
- Reduce irrigation
- Switch to salt-tolerant crops
- Flush soils
- Not growing crops for 2-5 years
- Install underground drainage
23Saltwater and drainage is a continual problem for
lowland agriculture near Puget Sound.
24Tidegate lets water out, but not back in.
25Solutions Soil Conservation
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27Soil Restoration
- Organic fertilizer
- Animal manure
- Green manure fresh cut vegetation
- Compost
- Crop rotation legume crops add nitrogen to soil
- Commercial inorganic fertilizer
28Catching and Raising More Fish
- Fisheries
- Fishing methods
- Overfishing
- Commercial extinction
- Aquiculture
- Fish farming and ranching
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30Pesticides Types
- Chemicals that kill undesirable organisms
- Insecticides - insects
- Herbicides - plants
- Fungicides - fungus
- Rodenticides - rodents
31First Generation Pesticides
- Primarily natural substances
- Sulfur, lead, arsenic, mercury
- Plant extracts nicotine, pyrethrum
32Second Generation Pesticides
- Primarily synthetic organic compounds
- Broad-spectrum agents toxic to many species
- Narrow-spectrum agents toxic to few species
- Persistence in the environment
33The Case for Pesticides
- Save human lives spread of disease
- Increase food supplies and lower costs
- Work better and faster than alternatives
- Health risks may be insignificant compared to
benefits - Newer pesticides are becoming safer
- New pesticides are used at lower rates
34Characteristics of an Ideal Pesticide
- Affects only target pests
- Harms no other species
- No genetic resistance
- Breaks down quickly in the environment
- Be more cost-effective than doing nothing
35The Case Against Pesticides
- Genetic resistance
- The pesticide treadmill pay more for less
effect - Can kill non-target and natural control species
- Can cause an increase in other pest species
- Pesticides do not stay put
- Can harm wildlife
- Potential human health threats
36Bioaccumulation and Biomagnification
- Persistent (non-biodegradable) toxins build up in
an animal over time bioaccumulation - Become more concentrated at higher trophic levels
biomagnification
37Integrated Pest Management
- Ecological system approach
- Reduce pest populations to economic threshold
- Field monitoring of pest populations
- Use of biological agents natural predators,
parasites, disease - Chemical pesticides are last resort
38Why is Integrated Pest Management not More Widely
Used?
- Requires expert knowledge
- Slower than conventional pesticides
- Initial costs may be high
- Hindered by pesticide industry
39Solutions Sustainable Agriculture
- Low-input agriculture
- Organic farming
- Profitable
- Increasing funding for research in sustainable
techniques
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