Title: Chapter 13: Food, Soil Conservation, and Pest Management
1Chapter 13 Food, Soil Conservation, and Pest
Management
We are nine meals away from anarchy. Lord
Cameron of Dillington
2Food for Thought
- What do humans need to live?
- What do people take into their bodies from the
environment to help them survive? - Why do we need air, water, and food to survive?
3An essential element
- is required for an organism to complete its life
cycle - cannot be replaced by another element
- is directly involved in the organisms
metabolism and - is required by many different organisms.
- Adapted from Arnon, D. Stout, P. (1939). The
essentiality of certain elements in minute
quantity for plants with special reference to
copper. Plant Physiology, 14(3), 599-602.
4(No Transcript)
5Elements Essential for Human Growth
6Food Security
Today we produce more than enough food to meet
the basic nutritional needs of every person on
the earth.
7Food Security
- every person in a given area has daily access
to enough nutritious food to have an active and
healthy life. - Impediments to national food security
- Poverty
- War and corruption
- Harmful environmental effects of agriculture
- Climate change
8Nutrition
- To maintain good health, people require
macronutrients and micronutrients in their diet. - Chronic undernutrition (hunger) people cannot
grow or buy enough food to meet their basic
energy needs - Malnutrition people who consume a diet deficient
in protein, calories, and/or other key nutrients - Usually a low protein, high carbohydrate,
vegetarian diet - Affects 1 in 6 people in developing countries
mostly children
9Nutrition
- Micronutrient deficiency Underconsumption of
even small amounts of nutrients with necessary
health benefits or essential functions in the
body - 1 in 3 suffer from vitamin or mineral deficiency
- Vitamin A increased susceptibility to childhood
diseases/ blindness - Iron anemia, fatigue, infection, increases
likelihood women die in childbirth - Iodine goiter, proper metabolism
10Famine
- a severe shortage of food in an area
accompanied by mass starvation, many deaths,
economic chaos, and social disruption. - Causes
- Crop failures
- Drought
- Flooding
- War
- Other natural disasters
Sudan famine, 2000
11Overnutrition
- occurs when food energy intake exceeds energy
use and causes excess body fat. - Consequences of overnutrition
- Greater incidence of disease and illness
- Lower life expectancy
- Reduced quality of life
- Disproportionate expenditure of capital
- 93 of Americans fall into this
category
12Growing Food
- Do plants need food?
- 2. Do you think that plants require the same
essential elements as humans?
13Elements Essential for Plant Growth
14Elements Essential for Plant Animal Growth
15Sources of Essential Nutrients
Essential Nutrient Air Water Soil
Boron (B)
Calcium (Ca)
Carbon (C)
Chlorine (Cl)
Copper (Cu)
Hydrogen (H)
Iron (Fe)
Magnesium (Mg)
Manganese (Mn)
Molybdenum (Mo)
Nickel (Ni)
Nitrogen (N)
Oxygen (O)
Phosphorus (P)
Potassium (K)
Sulfur (S)
Zinc (Zn)
16Sources of Essential Nutrients
Essential Nutrient Air Water Soil
Boron (B) S
Calcium (Ca) S
Carbon (C) A S
Chlorine (Cl) S
Copper (Cu) S
Hydrogen (H) A W S
Iron (Fe) S
Magnesium (Mg) S
Manganese (Mn) S
Molybdenum (Mo) S
Nickel (Ni) S
Nitrogen (N) S
Oxygen (O) A W S
Phosphorus (P) S
Potassium (K) S
Sulfur (S) S
Zinc (Zn) S
17Essential Element Summary
- Plants get their essential elements (nutrients)
from three sources - Water hydrogen and oxygen
- Air hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon
- Soil All essential elements
- Farmers need to know which essential elements are
found in the soil and how much of each is present.
18Homework
- Due January 24
- Read pp.67-70 in text
- Research the N-P-K rating on fertilizers. What is
it? What essential elements are involved? Why are
these important to plants? Submit paragraph in
MLA format to drop box. - LAB Wednesday!
- Goggles and aprons REQUIRED