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Agriculture and Society

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Title: Agriculture and Society


1
Agriculture and Society
Chapter 4 Lesson 4.1
2
Theme Outline
  • Lesson 4.1
  • Food Production
  • Food Production in Industrialized Countries
  • From Farm to Market
  • Food Production in Developing Countries

3
PA Academic Standards for Environment Ecology
  • Standard 4.4.10.A
  • Describe the importance of agriculture to
    society.
  • Identify the major cash crops of Pennsylvania.
  • Identify what percentage of the United States
    population is involved in the food and fiber
    industry.
  • Compare and contrast the influence of agriculture
    on a nations culture, standard of living and
    foreign trade.
  • Identify laws that affect conservation and
    management of food and fiber production in the
    local area and analyze their impact.
  • Compare a contemporary economic issue in
    agriculture to its historical origin.

4
Learning Objectives
  • Students will identify what percentage of the
    U.S. population is involved in the food and fiber
    industry.
  • Students will identify the major cash crops of
    Pennsylvania.
  • Students will compare and contrast the influence
    of agriculture on a nations culture, standard of
    living, and foreign trade.
  • Students will compare a contemporary economic
    issue in agriculture with its historical origin.

5
Agriculture Basics
  • Agriculture is an integral part of every society.
  • Advances in agricultural has resulted in more
    food being grown on less land to meet the needs
    of a constantly growing population.
  • ¼ of the worlds food exports come from the
    United States.
  • Why the U.S.? 1) Fertile soil
  • 2) Favorable Climate
  • 3) Access to Technology

6
A change in times
  • In 1790, first national census recorded 95 of
    the United States population as farmers.
  • These farmers grew only enough food to meet
    their own needs.
  • In 2000, the national census recorded 2 of the
    United States population as farmers.
  • These farmers produce more food in greater
    varieties than in any other time in U.S. history.

7
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8
Food and Fiber System
  • Definition system that produces enough food to
    feed the more than 280 million people of the
    United States

Number of People Fed Annually By One Farmer
9
Pennsylvania Agriculture Basics
  • About 59,000 farms in Pennsylvania, 9 million
    acres cultivated
  • 18th highest income by state from agriculture
  • One of the nations leading milk producers
  • First in the nation for mushroom production

Dairy Cattle Produce 10,740,000,000 Pounds of
Milk Per Year in Pennsylvania. Generating
Approximately 1,667,400,000.00.
http//agimpact.aers.psu.edu
10
Across the nation
  • Small farms (sell less than 250,000 worth of
    crops of livestock annually) in the United States
    still outnumber the large scale farms in the
    nation.
  • Bulk of the food produced in the United States
    now comes from large farms, owned and run by
    large corporations.

11
How does corporate farming work?
  • Typical scenario
  • Technology costs have increased, making it harder
    for small farms to grow crops competitively
  • Large corporate farms can afford this new
    technology, which allows them to grow more food
    per acre of land
  • Since small farms cannot afford this increased
    cost of technology, many farmers abandon their
    fields
  • Corporations buy unused farmland from small scale
    farmers
  • Conclusion corporate farms thrive, small farms
    struggle

12
Food Production
  • Main production types by nation
  • Food Production in Industrialized Nations
  • Example United States of America
  • Food Production in Developing Nations
  • Example Mexico

13
Green Revolution
  • Definition modern farming method that uses
    scientifically produced varieties of grain (rice,
    wheat, corn) and fertilizers, pesticides, and
    water to increase crop yields

14
Food Production in Industrialized Countries
  • More food produced per acre, not by planting
    more, but by coaxing the land to produce more per
    acre as a result of the green revolution.
  • Developed nations have increased their
    production, growing enough food to feed
    themselves, as well as export to other nations

15
Industrialized Nations Irrigation Systems
  • Increase land productivity
  • Access to large amounts of water
  • Sophisticated irrigation systems used
  • Irrigation allows arid land to become suitable
    for farming.

16
Industrialized Nations Machinery
  • Increase land productivity
  • Access to labor-saving technology
  • Technology used throughout the farming practice
  • Example used in planting, tending to, and
    harvesting crops
  • Example automation in livestock facilities

17
What does this increased production do to the
overall cost of food?
  • More food produced means less expensive food in
    these countries
  • Less expensive food means consumers can afford to
    purchase more product, spending less of their
    income on food supplies
  • Less money spent on food means more money left in
    the consumer's pocket

18
What does this increased production do to the
overall food supply?
  • More food produced more surplus food available
    for export
  • Surplus food means an increased revenue for
    exporting countries
  • Imported food drains the revenue of importing
    countries

19
Cost of increasing productivity
  • Concentrated animal and crop production can lead
    to issues such as
  • Manure disposal issues
  • Controlling flies and other insect populations
  • Suppressing odors
  • Over reliance on chemical fertilizers and
    pesticides
  • Chemical pest resistant in insect populations

20
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21
From Farm to Market
  • Farming has changed over the years
  • Historically, farmers raised just enough food for
    themselves and their families, doing their work
    almost entirely by hand
  • The domestication of livestock to help with farm
    work, allowed farmers to cultivate more land,
    thus producing a surplus of food
  • Modern agricultural technology allows only a
    small percentage of people to produce a majority
    of the worlds food supply.
  • Agricultural has become impersonal, being
    consumers do not generally know the people who
    have actually farmed their food

22
From Farm to Market
  • A simple process
  • crops are grown and sold at roadside stands,
    farmers co-ops, and farmers markets by local
    farmers
  • A more complicated process
  • crops are sold to large companies, processed,
    and used to produce processed foods, which are
    then shipped for distribution and sale
  • Example applesauce from locally grown apples

23
Food Production in Developing Countries
  • Agricultural practices vary greatly by country
  • Some farmers have large modern farming operations
    without the use of expensive green revolution
    technology
  • Restricted access to expensive supplies
  • High-yield seeds
  • Fertilizers
  • Pesticides
  • Modern machinery
  • Irrigation systems

24
Food Production in Developing Countries
  • Developing nations have a lower crop yield than
    developed nations
  • Developing nations face a challenge that most
    industrial nations do not face
  • Problem Populations are increasing in many
    developing nations. If these countries can
    currently not produce enough food and can not
    afford to import food from other countries, who
    are these countries going to meet the needs of
    their growing populations?

25
Subsistence Farming
  • Definition farming method that just meets a
    farmers survival needs
  • Two main types of subsistence farming
  • Shifting cultivation
  • Slash-and-burn agriculture

26
Shifting Cultivation
  • Definition farming method in which farmers clear
    a plot of land in the forest, plant crops in it
    for a few years until the soil is depleted, and
    then move onto clear a different field

27
Slash-and-burn Agriculture
  • Definition farming method in which farmers clear
    fields by cutting the trees and burning the
    vegetation where it lies on the ground

28
Problems with subsistence farming
  • Occurs mainly in tropical regions of the world
  • Characteristic of tropical regions
  • Poor soil
  • Nutrients locked away in vegetation
  • Tropical rains quickly leach soil nutrients
  • Soil bakes in hot sun forming dry, impenetrable
    soil
  • Forces farmers to relocate every several years,
    after soil nutrients have been exhausted
  • Forces farmers to constantly clear large tracks
    of land, resulting in global deforestation
    concerns
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