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Agriculture

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Chapter 10 Agriculture – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Agriculture


1
Chapter 10
  • Agriculture

2
Economic Activities
  • Primary Sector
  • The primary sector of the economy extracts or
    harvests products from the earth.
  • The primary sector includes the production of raw
    material and basic foods.
  • Activities associated with the primary sector
    include agriculture (both subsistence and
    commercial), mining, forestry, farming, grazing,
    hunting and gathering, fishing, and quarrying.
  • The packaging and processing of the raw material
    associated with this sector is also considered to
    be part of this sector.

3
Primary Sector
4
Secondary Sector The secondary sector of the
economy manufactures finished goods. All of
manufacturing, processing, and construction lies
within the secondary sector. Activities
associated with the secondary sector include
metal working and smelting, automobile
production, textile production, chemical and
engineering industries, aerospace manufacturing,
energy utilities, engineering, breweries and
bottlers, construction, and shipbuilding.
5
Secondary Sector Jobs
6
  • Tertiary Sector
  • The tertiary sector of the economy is the service
    industry. This sector provides services to the
    general population and to businesses.
  • Activities associated with this sector include
    retail and wholesale sales, transportation and
    distribution, entertainment (movies, television,
    radio, music, theater, etc.), restaurants,
    clerical services, media, tourism, insurance,
    banking, healthcare, and law.
  • In most developed and developing countries, a
    growing proportion of workers are devoted to the
    tertiary sector. In the U.S., more than 80 of
    the labor force are tertiary workers.

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Tertiary Sector
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Quaternary Sector
  • The quaternary sector of the economy consists of
    intellectual activities.
  • Activities associated with this sector include
    government, culture, libraries, scientific
    research, education, and information technology.

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First Agricultural Revolution
  • The planned cultivation of seed crops.
  • Sowing, watering, harvesting
  • Fertile Crescent

11
Subsistence Agriculture in the Modern World
12
What does subsistence farming mean?
  • In the strictest senseonly grow enough to
    survive
  • Today we use it to describe societies where
    farmers, with small plots sometimes sell a few
    pounds of grain on the market, but where poverty
    is a way of life

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Second Agricultural Revolution
  • Similar to the Industrial Revolution in that this
    was composed of a series of innovations,
    improvements, and techniques that would generate
    the kinds of surpluses needed to feed thousands
    of people who worked the factories instead of the
    fields.

15
Von Thünen's Model of Land Use
  • Early in the 19th century Johann Heinrich von
    Thünen (1783-1850) developed a model of land use
    that showed how market processes could determine
    how land in different locations would be used.
  • Von Thünen was a skilled farmer who was
    knowledgeable in economics.

16
Think of a bulls eye!
  • Nearest the town, farmers produced commodities
    that were perishable and commanded high prices,
    such as dairy products and strawberries.
  • At this level, Von Thunen believed agriculture
    would be produced with a high level of intensity.

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  • It is simplest to explain von Thünen's model in
    terms of agricultural land use but it is not
    limited to that land use.
  • Suppose the land surrounding a city market can be
    used for
  • truck farms for growing tomatoes
  • orchards for growing apples
  • wheat farms

19
The costs for transporting the crops from these
uses differ. Let bx be the cost for transporting
the product of one acre of land use x a distance
of one mile. Furthermore, suppose b tomatoesgt
bapples gt bwheat
20
  • Let us now plot a graph in which the horizontal
    axis is the distance from the city and the
    vertical axis is the land rent that a user can
    pay.
  • Consider first the land rent tomato growers can
    pay at various distances from the city.
  • Farmers at greater distances can pay only a lower
    rent because of the higher transportation costs
    for hauling their product to the city.

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25
Intensive or Extensive?
  • Tomatoes
  • Corn
  • Dairy products
  • Wheat
  • Strawberries
  • Potatoes

26
  • Society
  • Increased food security for growing populations

Thomas Malthus??? What did he say
again? Possible solution GMO Genetically
Modified Organism, AKA Genetically Modified
Food
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Pros and Cons of Genetically Modified Food
genetically-modified foods food plants that have
been genetically altered by the addition of
foreign genes to enhance a desired trait.
30
  • Benefits
  • Crops
  • Enhanced taste and quality
  • Reduced maturation time
  • Increased nutrients, yields, and stress tolerance
  • Improved resistance to disease, pests, and
    herbicides
  • New products and growing techniques

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  • Animals
  • Increased resistance, productivity, hardiness,
    and feed efficiency
  • Better yields of meat, eggs, and milk
  • Improved animal health and diagnostic methods

33
  • Environment
  • "Friendly" bioherbicides and bioinsecticides
  • Conservation of soil, water, and energy
  • Bioprocessing for forestry products
  • Better natural waste management
  • More efficient processing

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  • Controversies
  • Safety
  • Potential human health impacts, including
    allergens, transfer of antibiotic resistance
    markers, unknown effects
  • Potential environmental impacts, including
    unintended transfer of transgenes through
    cross-pollination, unknown effects on other
    organisms (e.g., soil microbes), and loss of
    flora and fauna biodiversity

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  • Access and Intellectual Property
  • Domination of world food production by a few
    companies
  • Increasing dependence on industrialized nations
    by developing countries
  • Biopiracy, or foreign exploitation of natural
    resources

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  • Ethics
  • Violation of natural organisms' intrinsic values
  • Tampering with nature by mixing genes among
    species
  • Objections to consuming animal genes in plants
    and vice versa
  • Stress for animal

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  • Labeling
  • Not mandatory in some countries (e.g., United
    States)
  • Mixing GM crops with non-GM products confounds
    labeling attempts

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  • Society
  • New advances may be skewed to interests of rich
    countries

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Agribusiness
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The Endor is it?
56
Oh waittheres more
57
And even more????
58
Last onefor reals!
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vhVrIyEu6h_E
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