Title: Agriculture
1Agriculture
- Most important question of the day Whats for
lunch?
2Agriculture deliberate land modification through
plant cultivation and raising animals for food or
profit.
- Percentage of labor force MDC 5 (avg.), LDC
55 - Source URL http//www.faculty.de.gcsu.edu/dvess/
gissues/agrlabor.jpg
3Subsistence Agriculture
- food production primary for farm family
consumption - Example slash and burn
- http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6b
/Bakweri_cocoyam_farmer_from_Cameroon.jpg - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsistence_farming
4Commercial Agriculture
- food production primarily for sale off the farm
- Can Start as subsistence farming, excess sold
- Can transition to pure commercial agriculture
- http//www.internationalspecialreports.com/theamer
icas/00/bahamas/17-2.gifhttp//www.georgetowncran
berry.com/images/skipper.jpg
5Agribusiness
- integration of commercial agriculture into food
processing, - usually by corporations
- Image http//www.agribusiness-mgmt.wsu.edu/Templa
tes/index_images/Landscape-Green_r2_c24_.jpg - Source http//www.agribusiness-mgmt.wsu.edu/
6Wet Rice Agriculture
- Generally expands to hillsides as population
increases - In earthquake zones, mudslide risks increase
Also, storms. - Image http//geographyfieldwork.com/riceterrace_s
mall.jpg - Information http//geographyfieldwork.com/RiceFar
m.htm
7Swidden Agriculture / slash and burn / shifting
cultivation
- Slash vegetation.
- Burn the slashed veg.
- Plant in nutrient ashes.
- Yields drop off.
- Change sites. Repeat.
- Requires much land recovering from past slash and
burn activities.
http//www.artsci.wustl.edu/anthro/images/rainfor
est/26.JPG Slash http//www.artsci.wustl.edu/ant
hro/images/rainforest/22.JPG Burn
http//images.google.com/imgres?imgurlhttp//www.
artsci.wustl.edu/anthro/images/rainforest/26.JPG
imgrefurlhttp//www.artsci.wustl.edu/anthro/imag
es/rainforest/h512w768sz140tbnidTO1EkMcffX
OxEMtbnh94tbnw141hlenstart5prev/images
3Fq3Dshifting2Bcultivation26svnum3D1026hl3De
n26lr3D26safe3Doff26client3Dfirefox-a26rls
3Dorg.mozillaen-USofficial_s26sa3DG Growth
http//www.taa.org.uk/Courses/Week4/Swidden2.jpg T
ree http//www.sln.org.uk/geography/images/SLN_at_Ma
laysia2005/Richard20and20Bob/Shifting20cultivat
ion20266.jpg Story http//www.artsci.wustl.edu/
anthro/images/rainforest/
8Shifting cultivation (observations)
- SOUND Done wisely, it is ecologically sound in
otherwise uncultivable soils. - POPULATION Increasing population density
eventually makes this practice unsustainable. - TITLE In some countries, land tenure (ownership)
is established by cutting the land, not leaving
it idle (letting it recover). - COMPETITION In some places, shifting cultivation
is being replaced by a pattern of logging, cattle
ranching, and more intensive cash crop
cultivation. - LOSS This can be a first step in forest
conversion to grassland.
http//www.artsci.wustl.edu/anthro/images/rainfor
est/26.JPG http//www.artsci.wustl.edu/anthro/ima
ges/rainforest/27.JPG
9Issues for subsistence agriculture
- Population growth
- Forest fallow ? bush fallow ? short fallow ?
annual ? multi-cropping - Intensification may not be sustainable. (Site
dependent) - New farming methods require cash.
- more inputs fertilizer, manure, new tools, more
labor intensive - new seeds and new crops
- Needs to have enough income to fertilize, buy
equipment, buy seed. - International trade pressure
- conversion of food crops to cash crops for more
profit - drug crops (can be involuntary)
10Intensive subsistence agriculture
- Examples wet rice cultivation, dry farming
- maximize yield per acre, minimize unused land,
some double cropping - low machinery inputs, high animal and human
inputs - dry farming ? crop rotation
11Pastoral nomadism works on marginal lands
- If you avoid overgrazing!
- Story http//www.geographie.uni-freiburg.de/ipg/f
orschung/ap1/current_projects/chad/nomads_project
20area.html - Image http//www.geographie.uni-freiburg.de/ipg/f
orschung/ap1/current_projects/chad/harmattan20vac
hes20en20transhumance20big.jpg
12MDC farming
- Mixed crop and livestock farming crops ? animals
? humans (e.g. beef, milk, eggs) - crop rotation, nitrogen fixing crop intermixed
with primary crop(s) - Dairy farming within range of market (avoid
spoiling), refrigeration extends this range - Grain farming e.g. wheat belt
- Livestock ranching often on marginal lands in
the West, also Amazonia, Pampas, Outback - Mediterranean agriculture Horticulture growing
of fruits and vegetables, and flowers - Commercial gardening and fruit gardening
horticulture, large scale, migrant workers - Plantation farming specialize in 1-2 crops, once
slavery, now import workers
13How Do you figure out what to grow where?
- Von Thunen Model Important
- Influences
- Market Price
- Distance
- Transportation Cost
- Perishability, (actually covered under
transportation cost) - Likely on the quiz, test, and final exam.
14Von Thunen Model
- Distance is a function of land rent and
transportation costs. - Basically, what produces the most profit at each
location? - http//people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch6en/conc6
en/img/vonthunen.gif - Info http//people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch6en
/conc6en/vonthunen.html
15Issues for commercial farmers
- Access to market Von Thunen model (ring and
transport) - Land rent and distance driven too far ? no
profit, lose - Overproduction
- encourage growth of crops with global demand
- price subsidies
- buy surplus yield, often donate to foreign
governments - Unsustainable agriculture
- move to more sustainable practices
- sensitive land management
- Ridge contour tillage
- limited use of chemicals
- (organic farming)
16Issues for subsistence farmers
- Population growth
- Forest fallow ? bush fallow ? short fallow ?
annual cropping ? multi-cropping - Conversion from slash and burn to multi-crop
farming may not be sustainable - Profit motives impact farmers.
- Lure of money
- Land loss (legal, and illegal) to for-profit
activity
17International trade pressure
- conversion of food crops to cash crops
- may make the economy dependent on foreign foods
- if so, cash crop shortfalls or price drops ?
avoidable food shortages - drug crops
- forced or voluntary growth of drug crops
18Strategies for increasing food supply
- Increase agricultural land
- marginal lands
- require careful management for long-term yields
- must worry about soil salinization, selenium,
etc. - desertification human action causes land
deterioration to a desert-like state. - Increase land productivity
- green revolution
- often requires nutrient inputs (external, cost)
- often relies on machines (external, cost, needs
gas) - seed stocks are foreign owned, possibly not self
propagating
19Strategies for increasing food supply (part 2)
- Identify new sources
- Cultivate the oceans
- We are already over-fishing now.
- (Stock recovery, or risk extinction.)
- Develop higher protein cereals (decrease meat
demand) - Promote the consumption of under-used foods, e.g.
soybeans (soy burgers, etc.) - increase trade
- Reduces local famines
- Works until you run out globally.
- Who starves first?
20Food supply crises
- Example Africa
- Population increases faster than local food
supply. - Over-planting removes soil nutrients.
- Trees harvested for firewood.
- Overgrazing removes grasses and herbs.
- Desertification is a major problem.
- The desert has been marching south towards the
sea. - Warfare, ethnic cleansing, cash crops, and global
warming exacerbate the problem.
21Questions?