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Ch 10: Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future of Food

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Title: Ch 10: Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future of Food


1
Ch 10 Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future
of Food
  • Case Study Oaxaca, Mexico
  • The Race to Feed the World
  • Pests and Pollinators

2
Case 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
3
The 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)

4
The 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

5
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6
The 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
7
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8
The 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

9
The 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
o
10
The 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
11
The Race to Feed the WorldThe green revolution
has brought the environment both benefit and harm
  • Benefit
  • 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

12
Questions to consider
  • Has the green revolution solved problems, delayed
    our resolution of problems, or created new ones?
  • How sustainable are green revolution approaches?

13
Pests 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
14
Thousands 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

15
Growing 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

16
Biological 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

17
Biocontrol 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

18
Integrated 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

19
Pollination
  • 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

20
(gt.)gtTHE END!!!lt(.lt)
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