Title: Challenges of Producing More Crop and Livestock
1Challenges of Producing More Crop and Livestock
- Domestication and Genetic Diversity
- Domestication of crops and livestock causes a
loss of genetic diversity - Farmer selects and propagates animals with
desirable agricultural characteristics
- Many high yielding crops are genetically uniform
- High likelihood that bacteria, fungi, viruses,
etc. will attack and destroy entire crop
2Challenges of Producing More Crop and Livestock
- Food production increased in developed countries
(wheat (left) - Pesticides
- Selective breeding
3Case-In-Point Green Revolution
- High Yielding Rice Varieties
4Core Case Study Golden Rice -Grains of Hope or
an Illusion?
- Golden rice is a new genetically engineered
strain of rice containing beta-carotene. - Can inexpensively supply vitamin A to
malnourished.
Figure 13-1
5Core Case Study Golden Rice -Grains of Hope or
an Illusion?
- Critics contend that there are quicker and
cheaper ways to supply vitamin A. - Scientist call for more evidence that the
beta-carotene will be converted to vitamin A by
the body.
Figure 13-1
6Challenges of Producing More Crop and Livestock
- Increasing Livestock Yields
- Hormone supplements
- US and Canada do this
- Europe does not citing human health concerns
- Antibiotics
- 40 of antibiotics produced in US are used in
livestock operations - Problems with increased bacteria resistance
7Antibiotic Use and Resistance
8Genetic Engineering
- Manipulation of genes by taking specific gene
from a cell of one species and placing it into
the cell of an unrelated species
9Issue with Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs)
- Determined to be safe for human consumption
- Concerns about GMO seed or pollen spreading in
wild - Backlash against GMOs
- GMOs are not currently labeled
- FDA finds it would be counterproductive and
expensive to label
10Environmental Impacts of Agriculture
- High use of fossil fuels and pesticides
- Air pollution
- Untreated animal wastes and agricultural
chemicals - Water pollution
- Harms fisheries
- Insects, weeds, and disease-causing organisms
developing resistance to pesticides - Contaminate food supply
11Environmental Impact of Agriculture
- Land degradation
- Decreases future ability of land to support crops
or livestock - Habitat fragmentation
- Breakup of large areas of habitat into small,
isolated patches - Cultivating marginal lands
- Irrigating dry land
- Cultivating land prone to erosion
12Solutions to Agricultural Problems- Sustainable
Agriculture
13Sustainable Agriculture
- Examples
- Natural Predator-prey relationships instead of
pesticides - Crop selection
- Crop rotation and conservation tillage
- Supplying nitrogen with legumes
- Organic agriculture
- Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
- Limited use of pesticides with sustainable
agriculture practices
14Fisheries of the World- Problems
- No nation lays claim to open ocean
- Resource susceptible to overuse and degradation
- Overharvesting
- Many species are at point of severe depletion
- Cod (right)
- 62 of worlds fish stock are in need of
management action
15Fisheries of the World- Problems
- Overharvesting (continued)
- Sophisticated fishing equipment
- Bycatch killed off
- Magnuson Fisheries Conservation Act
16Fisheries of the World- Problems
- Ocean Pollution - dumping ground
- Oil
- Heavy metals
- Deliberate litter dumping
- Stormwater runoff from cities and agricultural
areas - Aquaculture
- Growing of aquatic organisms for human
consumption - Great potential to supply food
17Fisheries of the World- Problems
- Aquaculture (continued)
- Locations of fisheries may hurt natural habitats
- Produce waste that pollutes adjacent water
18Aquaculture Aquatic Feedlots
- Raising large numbers of fish and shellfish in
ponds and cages is worlds fastest growing type
of food production. - Fish farming involves cultivating fish in a
controlled environment and harvesting them in
captivity. - Fish ranching involves holding anadromous species
that live part of their lives in freshwater and
part in saltwater. - Fish are held for the first few years, released,
and then harvested when they return to spawn.
19 Trade-Offs
Aquaculture
Advantages
Disadvantages
Fig. 13-24, p. 292
20 Solutions
More Sustainable Aquaculture
Use less fishmeal feed to reduce depletion of
other fish
Improve management of aquaculture wastes
Reduce escape of aquaculture species into the
wild
Restrict location of fish farms to reduce loss
of mangrove forests and estuaries
Farm some aquaculture species in deeply
submerged cages to protect them from wave action
and predators and allow dilution of wastes into
the ocean
Certify sustainable forms of aquaculture
Fig. 13-25, p. 293
21SOLUTIONS MOVING TOWARD GLOBAL FOOD SECURITY
- People in urban areas could save money by growing
more of their food. - Urban gardens provide about 15 of the worlds
food supply. - Up to 90 of the worlds food is wasted.
Figure 13-26
22Government Policies and Food Production
- Governments use three main approaches to
influence food production - Control prices to keep prices artificially low.
- Provide subsidies to keep farmers in business.
- Let the marketplace decide rather that
implementing price controls.
23Solutions Steps Toward More Sustainable Food
Production
- We can increase food security by
- slowing populations growth
- sharply reducing poverty
- slowing environmental degradation of the worlds
soils and croplands.