Title: Some key points from WF
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2Put global Ag facts together
- Asia and Africa have
- the largest numbers / proportions of hungry
people, - the lowest rates of acres/person of agriculture,
- Inherently low per acre productivity because of
old, depleted soils (Africa), - Large human density and population increase
rates, - A small capacity to expand agricultural acreage
- SE Asia has increased productivity quite a lot,
but otherwise this seems pretty grim
3If food production increases at a rate slower
than human population growth for the next 50
years
- More people will go hungry even if food
distribution improves, or - More natural habitat will be lost to agriculture,
or - The 1 billion who eat high on the food chain and
eat too many calories will have to curtail excess
consumption of agricultural energy
NOV 2. 2007
4Will the green revolution succeed in Asia and
Africa?
- Gaining benefit from high responders (crops)
requires - Water for irrigation in relatively dry regions to
achieve environmental certainty and - Energy for the chemical applications and
- Money to afford proprietary crop lines
5Will the green revolution succeed in Asia and
Africa?
- Can these region achieve the required chemical
applications? - Do these regions have the climatic certainty
dry, irrigate? - Both Asia and Africa have problems with this
- Will they be able to afford the crop genetics?
6Food Security
- Poverty is the greatest threat to food security.
- About 815 million people are chronically
undernourished (200 million are children). - Chronically undernourished lt 90 of the 2,770
calories / day needed for an active life. - Within families that dont get enough to eat,
women and children have the poorest diets. - Food security - the ability to obtain sufficient
food on a day-to-day basis
7Famines Some Causes
- Environmental conditions - drought, insects,
natural disasters - National politics - corruption, oppression
- Armed conflict
- Economics - price gouging, poverty, landlessness
8Focus on Aid Focus on local solutions
9Option 1Industrialization
10Agricultural Resources
- Water - agriculture accounts for the largest
single share of global water use - Fertilizer - problems with excess use
- Energy - most of our foods require more energy to
produce, process, and transport than they yield
when we eat them - Pesticides health risks, decreasing
effectiveness
11Option 2The diffused organic option
12Our neighbors to the north
13Implementing Kyoto at the grass roots
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15Standings
- Bay Area
- Berkeley Bowlers 7
- San Jose Bush Babies 5
- San Francisco Huskies 5
- Lafayette Diablos 4
- Oakland Bombers 3
Purpose each answer is worth 5 points to a
maximum of 50. If your team does not reach 10,
you will receive lt 100. For example, Martinez
has 10 of 50 points, currently.
- So Cal
- Ventura Squid 7
- Snta Barb Green 7
- SLO Moes 5
- SD Explorers 5
- LA Ducts 2
- Pacific Rim
- Sac Planetiers (1) 13
- Hawaii T.huggers 7
- Alaska Drillers 4
- Sonoma Whiners 3
- Martinez Muirs 2
16Soil.
- Civilization itself rests upon the soil.
- --Thomas Jefferson
- We stand only six inches from desolation, for
that is the thickness of the topsoil layer upon
which the entire life of the planet exists - --R. Neil Sampson
17Soil profile
Thickness varies
- Consists of layers called horizons.
- Simplest
- A topsoil
- B subsoil
- C parent material
- But most have O, A, E, B, C, and R
Figure 8.8
18Soil profile
- O Horizon Organic or litter layer
- A Horizon Topsoil. Mostly inorganic minerals
with some organic material and humus mixed in.
Crucial for plant growth - E Horizon Eluviation horizon loss of minerals
by leaching, a process whereby solid materials
are dissolved and transported away - B Horizon Subsoil. Zone of accumulation or
deposition of leached minerals and organic acids
from above - C Horizon Slightly altered parent material
- R Horizon Bedrock
19Soil as a system
- Parent material, such as bedrock, is weathered to
begin process of soil formation.
20Soil characterization
- Soil can be characterized by color and several
other traits - texture
- structure
- pH
Figure 8.9
21Soil texture
Figure 8.10
22Soil Organisms
Without soil organisms, the earth would be
covered with sterile mineral particles.
23Soil Degradation
- Caused by
- Overcultivating, too much plowing, poor
planning - Overgrazing rangeland with livestock
- Deforestation, especially on slopes
24Overgrazing
- When livestock eat too much plant cover on
rangelands, impeding plant regrowth -
- The contrast between ungrazed and overgrazed land
on either side of a fenceline can be striking.
25Overgrazing
- Overgrazing can set in motion a series of
positive feedback loops.
Figure 8.21
26Desertification
- A loss of more than 10 productivity due to
- Erosion ---(wind water)
- Soil compaction
- Forest removal
- Overgrazing
- Drought
- Salinization
- Climate change
- Depletion of water resources
- etc.
When severe, there is expansion of desert areas,
or creation of new ones, e.g., the Middle East,
formerly, Fertile Crescent.
27Regions of concern for the health of soils Note
the regions of high human density
28Erosion The Nature of the Problem
- Erosion - natural process, but a disaster when it
occurs in the wrong place at the wrong time - Consequence Water table depression results
leaving crops less able to survive without
irrigation
29Types of soil erosion
Splash erosion
Rill erosion
Gully erosion
Sheet erosion
Figure 8.11
30Mechanisms of Erosion
- Most soil erosion on agricultural land is rill
erosion - Some of the highest erosion rates in the world
occur in the U.S. and Canada - row crops leave
soil exposed
31How much land is lost to erosion on ag lands?
- 28 billion tons / year (Enger Smith, Lester
Brown, Worldwatch) - 1/3 of global crop land is losing soil to erosion
faster than it is being renewed (Chiras) - 15 million ha of agricultural land lost each
year (8 million converted to other uses 4
million to deserts, 3 million to erosion)
Cunningham and Cunningham. - 40 of global ag lands have erosion issues
(Miller)
32Soil conservation
- As a result of the Dust Bowl,
- the U.S. Soil Conservation Act of 1935 and
- the Soil Conservation Service (SCS)
were created. - SCS Local agents in conservation districts
worked with farmers to disseminate scientific
knowledge and help them conserve their soil.
33Recent soil conservation laws
- The U.S. has continued to pass soil conservation
legislation in recent years - Food Security Act of 1985
- Conservation Reserve Program, 1985
- Freedom to Farm Act, 1996
- Low-Input Sustainable Agriculture Program,
1998 - Internationally, there is the UNs FAR program
in Asia.
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35Soil conservation
- Many nations followed the U.S. lead
- Today local soil conservation agents help
farmers in many places in the world. - Brazils no-till effort is based on local
associations. - Farmer and extension agent in Colombia
Figure 8.15
36Preventing soil degradation
- Several farming strategies to prevent soil
degradation - Crop rotation
- Contour farming
- Intercropping
- Terracing
- Shelterbelts
- Conservation tillage
37Conservation tillage Shelterbelts Intercropping Te
rracing Contour farming
Figure 8.16b
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40California Farm Environment
- Mix
- 35 million people
- 45 federal ownership on 100 million acres
- And worlds most diverse agriculture
- What results
- A scramble for how and when to protect or develop
agricultural land
41Farming has become a very complex enterprise
- Farmers are besieged by numerous laws and
regulations that restrict their behavior with
respect to - Land use (environmental impacts, open space,
endangered species, etc) - Chemical applications (health and safety, air and
water pollution) - Treatment of crops (food safety, etc).
- Labor laws..
42But,.
- Despite the regulations, farms remain our nations
largest polluter as a land use group and
constitute the focus of several new EPA
regulations and rules.
43Environmentalists love / hate relationship with Ag
- Agriculture creates pollution
- Non-point source pollution is now the biggest
contributor to degrading water quality, Ag is the
biggest non-point source. - Agriculture protects open space
- California has 184 land trusts (more than any
other state by a lot (eg, KS-8). These work to
save open space, and in some instances protect
farm land as farm land. - Agriculture degrades habitat
- Erosion, grazing, pesticides,.
- Agriculture provides habitat
- Grazing and forbs, rice and ducks, etc
44Sustainable Agriculture
- Sustainable agriculture (regenerative farming) -
goal is to produce food and fiber on a
sustainable basis and to repair damage caused by
destructive practices - Soil conservation - land management, ground
cover, climate, soil type, tillage system
important
45Programs work to maintain yield and reduce
pesticide application by integrating biocontrol,
crop rotation, tillage control and other
traditional and innovative techniques.
46Low-input Sustainable Agriculture
vs the corporate farm one farm in CA is 5,000
acres and has cash flow of 50 million
47Organic and Locally Grown Foods
Organic foods increasingly dominated by big
business ---organic certification implemented in
2003.
48US now has an organic certification program
Pros Quality assurance Cons Expensive and
small Org farmers are often opting out
49Food and Agriculture
- GMOs carry risks that are poorly understood
(probably small, but we just dont know) - GMOs will not alleviate international tension
over the advantages enjoyed by the developed
world. - What can you do eating organic eating locally
produced food - California and agriculture
- The scramble for land
- Farmers and their contribution toward conserving
habitat
50Major Food Sources
APPENDIX
Crops
- Three major crops
- High latitudes - potatoes, barley, oats, rye
- Warm, wet areas - roots and tubers
- Dry regions of Africa - sorghum and millet
- Fruits and vegetables
51Meat, Milk, and Seafood
APPENDIX
- Milk and meat highly prized, but distribution
inequitable - About 90 of the grain grown in North America is
used to feed cattle, hogs, poultry, and other
animals! - Seafood - important protein source in many
countries - threatened by overharvesting and
habitat destruction
52Regional soil differences and agriculture
- Soil and soil profiles vary from place to place,
with implications for agriculture. - Amazonian rainforest soil Lots of rain leaches
nutrients from topsoil out of reach of plant
roots. Other nutrients taken up by lush
vegetation, leaving little in soil. - Thus when farmed, soil gives out after a few
years. - Kansas prairie soil Low rainfall keeps
nutrients in topsoil, where plants take them up
and recycle them back into soil when they die.
Topsoil rich and productive.
53Essential Nutrients
APPENDIX
- Malnourishment - a nutritional imbalance caused
by a lack of specific dietary components or an
inability to utilize essential nutrients - Protein deficiency diseases kwashiorkor (low
protein), marasmus (low calories and protein) - Iron deficiency - anemia - most severe in India
- Iodine deficiency - goiter, hyperthyroidism
54Conclusions Challenges
- Human population continues to grow, requiring
more food production. - Soil erosion is a problem worldwide.
- Salinization, waterlogging, and other soil
degradation problems are leading to
desertification. - Grazing and logging, as well as cropland
agriculture, contribute to soil degradation.
55Conclusions Solutions
- Green revolution advances have kept up with food
demand so far. Improved distribution and slowed
population growth would help further. - Farming strategies like no-till farming, contour
farming, terracing, etc., help control erosion. - Government laws, and government extension agents
working with farmers, have helped improve farming
practices and control soil degradation. - Best management practice guidelines for grazing
and logging practices exist that have far less
impact on soils.
56Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs)
- How are GMOs invented?
- What is being used?
- What are the possible consequences?
- How much to we know about possible negative
consequences? - Who regulates GMOs and how?
57GMO news is everywhere!
58New Scientist
59- A) SEQUENCING
- Heat the DNA to unravel it.
- Amplify the DNA (make many copies)
- Use an enzyme to cut the DNA
- Use fragments of known DNA composition to line
up with unknown DNA and combine with fragments - Migrate them on a gel to get sets of chromosome
lengths - .
- All multicellular organisms contain cells with
chromosomes in the cell nuclei. - These chromosomes are DNA molecules. The DNA
contains the instruction manual for the
organism, containing codes for proteins that
cells will make.
- B) Identifying the GENES
- Cut portions out of DNA (on callus tissue)
- Examine function from adult plants to identify a
region of a chromosome that houses a gene
- C) Inserting Genes
- Cut the DNA from its source organism (e.g.,
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt)) - Replicate the DNA segment
- Use a vector (usually a virus or bacterial
plasmid to carry new gene - Infect undifferentiated cells (stem cells or
callus cells) with thousands of plasmids. - Segregate and keep cells that have taken up new
gene
graphics from GlaxoSmithKline
60The US leads the world in land planted with GMO
crops
2002.
Total 58.7 million ha (TX)
(roughly KS and NB, combined)
61Transgenic Crop Releases
1997-20011000/year 691 in 2002 gt 95 approved
62What are the crops? What does the modification
accomplish?
- Corn, canola, cotton, tomatoes, rice
- Herbivore resistance, herbicide resistance,
stress tolerance, (nutritional quality)
63Crops with USDA consultation
- Corn 17
- Canola / Rape 11
- Tomato 6
- Cotton 5
- Potato 3
- Soybean 3
- All others 9
- Monsanto 18
- AgrEvo 7
- Calgene 5
- 18 companies with 3 or fewer
- 52 of 54 for use in human food
- 44 of 54 for use in animal feed
64Environmental Impacts - Pros
- Reduce pesticide applications
- Developing crops that are resistant to herbicides
with a low residence time in the soils allows
farmers to use these (e.g., Roundup), rather than
more toxic and persistent chemicals (e.g.,
Atrazine). - Reduce water pollution
- Growing corn with low phosphorus content, results
in low phosphorus excrement from cows fed that
corn, reducing runoff pollution
How much financial incentive is there for a
company to produce such a product?
65Potential Positive Impacts on Human Health
- Increase nutritional value of rice (golden rice)
- Insert vaccines for things like dysentery into
foods like bananas (or vitamins)
NOTE The counter argument is that the better
approach is to solve the problem directly. We
dont need higher nutrition rice if the people
arent fundamentally starving. We dont need
vaccines for dysentery if we provide clean
drinking water.
66Environmental Impacts - Cons
- Resistance in pests
- Accelerate traditional resistance if more
herbicide is used crop because the crop is
resistant - New forms of resistance---Bt
- Horizontal Gene flow
- Recombination to form new pathogens
- It is a microbe that is used to put the genes in
jumping genes - Cross-fertilization with wild types
- Collateral Damage
- If GMO crops are resistant to one herbivore, then
it may have collateral negative impacts on
non-target species (Bt-corn and monarch
butterflies)
67Policy Who has control?
- US Dept. of Health and Human Services
- Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
- US Dept of Agriculture (USDA)
- Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) - Issues permits to bring in bioengineered plants
68- APHIS regulates the release of plants and animals
- Includes importing species for commercial
production or sale - Includes GMOs
- Burden of proof is such that species must be
shown to be harmful to be denied. - Requiring that the species has become a pest or
problem already here or somewhere else - Same is true of exotic species, which has
resulted in a very expensive non-native species
problem.
69US Food and Drug Policy
- FDA has argued that existing regulations are
sufficient to handle bioengineered foods, no new
regulations required (no labeling required) - FDA requests consultation voluntary, few so far
- http//www.cfsan.fda.gov/lrd/biocon.htmllist
- FDA does not require labeling for any
bioengineered products if the product is not
substantively different nor a comprehensive
review process for new products - laurate canola oil a new name for a GMO canola
that produces more lauric acid
70An aside regarding social justice
- GMOs are patented organisms
- Is it fair to patent an organism?
- GMOs are functionally sterile so growers must
keep buying the seed product - Does this help the developing world?
- The ethics of bioproducts and profit the case of
drug discovery and Yellowstone
71Grow your own Pesticides
- Bt toxins.
- Bacillus thuringiensis is a soil bacterium that
produces a protoxin. - The protoxin, in a crystalline form has been used
for years as an organic pesticide - Once in the gut of some insects, an alkaline
environment leads to the production of simpler
toxins as the insect breaks the protoxin down. - The toxins dissolve the gut of the insect,
killiing them - GMOs have an inserted the gene from Bt
- Plant produces Bt-like prototoxin
- Of 50 early FDA consultations, 21 have been for
herbivore resistance
72Bt Corn Bt etc
- Examples
- Corn (stem borers)
- Potatoes (Colorado potato beetle, potato virus)
- Does not work on leafhoppers
- Cotton (budworms)
- Tomato (lepidopterans)
- Environmental Defense has testified to EPA
regarding ancillary effects of Bt corn on monarch
butterfly populations. - Bt corn pollen (which contains the protoxin) is
dispersed. - Some lands on milkweeds, a required food of
monarchs. - Kills monarchs, Could lead to serious population
decline
73Bt concerns
- There is a strong track record on chemical use
resulting in selection in the pests for
tolerance. GMOs will too. - Every herbicide and pesticide has resulted in an
increased tolerance among pests. - The ubiquity of the Bt crops is already causing
concern for its limited lifespan of utility.
Monsanto is now recommending intercropping with
non-BT types. - Could be the demise of our best organic pesticide
- Build-up of stable protoxins in the soil reduces
soil organisms leading to auxiliary problems - Opposition is that the only real benefactor of
the product is Monsanto, not the farmer, nor
society
74Round-up Ready Crops
- By adding genes from herbicide-resistant weeds,
crop can then be sprayed with herbicides, with no
detrimental effect - Examples Cotton canola, corn, squash
- Net good or bad?
- Facilitates increased herbicide application on
crops - Allows the application of less persistent, milder
herbicides - Future will likely accelerate development of
herbicide tolerance in weeds - Of 50 consultations, 26 have been for herbicide
tolerance
75Terminator Technology
- In order to retain proprietary rights, companies
want to keep rights to seed. - This has been happening for years with hybrid
corn - Terminator technology was developed in 1996
- Since then 6 FDA actions have focused on ability
to add male sterility to engineered crops. - Will this also help limit unintended spread of
genes?
76One more issue on Policy
- Lacking governmental intervention, consumers in
many sectors have called for labeling - European community would like mandatory labeling
of all products - Alternative is to regulate honest labeling of
GMO-free products - FDA just got there with organic in 2002