Title: Ch 10: Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future of Food
1Ch 10 Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future
of Food
- Case Study Oaxaca, Mexico
- The Race to Feed the World
- Pests and Pollinators
2Case Study Possible Transgenic Maize in Oaxaca,
Mexico
- Corn was domesticated in Oaxaca 5500 years ago
- Native varieties serve as reservoirs of genetic
diversity that we may need to sustain or advance
our agriculture - In 2001 it was found that the genes of GM corn
(transgenes) had appeared in the genes of native
maize, which caused widespread concern - Another study conducted in 2003-04 found no
transgenes at all / - How does genetic modification of crops affect
people and the environment?
http//www.spiritofmaat.com/announce/gecornmex.htm
3The Race to Feed the WorldWe are producing more
food per person
- Over the past half century, our ability to
produce food has grown faster than the global
population - But because of political obstacles and
distribution inefficiencies, 850 million people
in developing countries dont have enough to eat
(down to 13 from 26 in 1970)
4The Race to Feed the WorldWe are producing more
food per person
- Scientists policymakers pursue a goal of food
security, the guarantee of an adequate and
reliable food supply for all people at all times - Devote more fossil fuel energy to agriculture
- Plant and harvest more frequently
- Increase the use of irrigation, fertilizer,
and pesticides - Increase the amount of cultivated land
- Develop more productive crop and livestock
varieties
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6The Race to Feed the WorldWe are producing more
food per person
- However, grain production per person has
decreased 9 since 1985 (varies by region) - Nearly all the planets arable land has been
claimed - There is no guarantee that food production will
continue to outpace population growth
http//www.economist.com/node/18200618
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8The Race to Feed the WorldWe face
undernourishment, overnutrition, and malnutrition
- Undernourishment in developing countries an
economic problem (low incomes half the world
population lives on lt 2/day). About a billion
undernourished people. 31 million Americans are
food insecure - Overnutrition in developed nations abundance of
food, cheap junk food, sedentary lifestyles - Malnutrition shortage of nutrients the body
needs. Can affect both undernourished and
overnourished individuals
9The Race to Feed the WorldThe green revolution
boosted agricultural production
- The desire for greater quantity quality of food
led in the mid- and late-20th century to the
green revolution - In the 1940s Norman Borlaug introduced a special
strain of wheat to Mexico, which soon tripled
wheat production - Other developing nations followed India,
Pakistan, etc. (saved India from famine in 1970s)
A temporary success in mans war against
hunger and deprivation.
http//opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/03/08/su
stainable-farming/?smidtw-NYTOpinionatorseidaut
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10The Race to Feed the WorldThe green revolution
boosted agricultural production
- Development of high-yielding varieties (HYVs) of
cereal grains - Expansion of irrigation infrastructure
- Modernization of management techniques
- Distribution of hybridized seeds, synthetic
fertilizers, and pesticides to farmers
(preexisting technologies)
These and other developments in the field of
agriculture contain the makings of a new
revolution. It is not a violent Red Revolution
like that of the Soviets, nor is it a White
Revolution like that of the Shah of Iran. I call
it the Green Revolution. William Gaud, USAID
director. 1968
11The Race to Feed the WorldThe green revolution
has brought the environment both benefit and harm
- Higher yield
- Reduced pressures to convert additional natural
lands for new cultivation - The planting of crops in monocultures has made
planting and harvesting more efficient
- Intensive application of water, fossil fuels,
inorganic fertilizers, and synthetic pesticides
worsened pollution, erosion, salinization, and
desertification - Monocultural planting has reduced biodiversity
over huge areas, increased susceptibility to
disease, and narrowed the human diet
12Questions to consider
- Has the green revolution solved problems, delayed
our resolution of problems, or created new ones? - How sustainable are green revolution approaches?
13Pests and Pollinators
Pests and weeds pose have always posed problems
for A pest is any organism that damages crops
that are valuable to people. A weed is any plant
that competes with crops These organisms are
simply attempting to survive and reproduce
There is truly no malice in their
existence/actions
14Thousands of Chemical Pesticides
- Aimed to kill
- Insects (insecticides)
- Plants (Herbicides)
- Fungi (Fungicides)
- Organisms (Pesticides)
- More than 32 billion is spent every year on
pesticides, 1/3 of which is spent in the U.S. - About 400 million kg of active ingredients from
pesticides are applied in the U.S. every year
15Growing Resistance to Pesticides
- Apart from the toxicity of the previously
mentioned chemicals, usefulness declines over
time as pests evolve resistances to them - Any gene that promotes an immunity to a specific
chemical may be shared through reproduction - Revolutionary Arms Race occurs between
industrial chemists and the pests they battle to
find/use stronger chemicals
16Biological Control
- Biological Control, or Biocontrol, operates on
the principle that the enemy of ones enemy is
ones friend - Essentially Introduces organisms to help fight
others - Cactus moth introduced to Australia to fight
Prickly Pear Cactus - Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) Naturally occurring
soil bacterium that produces a protein that kills
caterpillars and the larvae of flies and beetles - Spores are sprayed on crops for protection
17Biocontrol can be Harmful
- In some cases, biocontrol agents have become
invasive and unintentionally harmful to other
organisms - Due to the success of the previously mentioned
cactus moth, it was introduced to the Caribbean,
and then spread to Florida and is now destroying
native cacti there. - If Biocontrol works, it can be permanent in
solving the problem, but if it fails the harm
done can also be permanent
18Integrated Pest Management
- Realizing the drawbacks of both chemical use and
Biocontrol, farmers attempted to develop more
sophisticated strategies - Integrated Pest Management- integration of
various techniques in order to achieve long-term
suppression of pests, including Biocontrol,
chemical use (if necessary), habitat alteration,
crop rotation, transgenic crops, alternative
tillage methods, and mechanical pest removal - This method has become popular around the world
in recent decades
19Pollination
- Pollination- The process by which male sex cells
of a plant (pollen) fertilize female sex cells of
a plant recognized as the botanical version of
sexual intercourse - Can be influence by wind, or insects can play a
role - Conservation is vital
- Population of honeybee is declining
- Honeybees pollinate over 100 crops that make up
1/3 of the U.S. diet, therefore contributing
billions of dollars in services - Farmers and homeowners can reduce or eliminate
pesticide use in order to help maintain
populations of pollinating insects
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