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Identify the major causes of malnutrition.

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Title: Identify the major causes of malnutrition.


1
  • Identify the major causes of malnutrition.
  • Compare the environmental costs of producing
    different types of food.
  • Explain how food distribution problems and
    drought can lead to famine.
  • Explain the importance of the green revolution.

Section 1
2
Feeding the World
  • Famine is the widespread malnutrition and
    starvation in an area due to a shortage of food,
    usually caused by a catastrophic event.
  • Modern agriculture practices provide most of the
    worlds population with enough food to survive.
  • However, some of these practices can cause
    environmental damage that eventually makes
    growing food crops more difficult.

3
Humans and Nutrition
  • The human body uses food both as a source of
    energy and as a source of materials for building
    and maintaining body tissues.
  • The amount of energy that is available in food is
    expressed in Calories. One Calorie is equal to
    1,000 calories or one kilocalorie.

4
Humans and Nutrition
5
Humans and Nutrition
  • Malnutrition is a disorder of nutrition that
    results when a person does not consume enough of
    each of the nutrients that are needed by the
    human body.

6
Sources of Nutrition
7
Diets Around the World
8
World Food Problems
  • Some people become malnourished because they
    simply do not get enough food.
  • More food is needed each year to feed the worlds
    growing population.
  • World food production has been increasing for
    decades, but now food production is not
    increasing as fast as the human population is
    increasing.

9
World Food Problems
10
Unequal Distribution
  • If all the food in the world today were divided
    equally among the human population, no one would
    have quite enough food for good health.
  • But food is not divided equally, and malnutrition
    is largely the result of poverty. Even in the
    United States, many poor people suffer from
    malnutrition.
  • Wars and political strife can also lead to
    malnutrition because they interrupt
    transportation systems.

11
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12
Droughts and Famines
  • A drought is a prolonged period during which
    rainfall is below average, and crops grown
    without irrigation may produce low yields or fail
    entirely.
  • A drought is more likely to cause famine in
    places where most food is grown locally.
  • If a drought occurs, there may be no seed to
    plant crops the following year. The effects of a
    drought can continue for years.

13
The Green Revolution
  • Worldwide, between 1950 and 1970, increases in
    crop yields resulted from the use of new crop
    varieties and the application of modern
    agriculture techniques.
  • These changes were called the green revolution.
    Since the 1950s, the green revolution has changed
    the lives of millions of people.
  • However, the green revolution also had some
    negative effects.

14
The Green Revolution
  • For example, most new varieties of grain produce
    large yields only if they receive large amounts
    of water, fertilizer, and pesticides. In
    addition, the machinery, irrigation, and
    chemicals required by new crop varieties can
    degrade the soil if they are not used properly.
  • As a result of the overuse of fertilizers and
    pesticides, yields from green revolution crops
    are falling. The grain production in the U.S. has
    decreased since 1990, partly because the amount
    of water used for irrigation has decreased.

15
The Green Revolution
  • In addition, the green revolution had a negative
    impact on subsistence farmers, or farmers who
    grow only enough food for local use.
  • Before the green revolution, subsistence farmers
    worked most of the worlds farms.
  • But they could not afford the equipment, water,
    and chemicals needed to grow new crop varieties.

16
Objectives
  • Distinguish between traditional and modern
    agricultural techniques.
  • Describe fertile soil.
  • Describe the need for soil conservation.
  • Explain the benefits and environmental impacts of
    pesticide use.
  • Explain what is involved in integrated pest
    management.
  • Explain how genetic engineering is used in
    agriculture.

Section 2
17
Agriculture Traditional
  • The basic processes of farming include plowing,
    fertilization, irrigation, and pest control.
  • Traditionally, plows are pushed by the farmers or
    pulled by livestock. Plowing helps crops grow by
    mixing soil nutrients, loosening soil particles,
    and uprooting weeds. Organic fertilizers, such as
    manure, are used to enrich soil. While fields are
    irrigated by water flowing through ditches.
  • These traditional techniques have been used since
    the earliest days of farming.

18
Agriculture Modern
  • In most industrialized countries, the basic
    processes of farming are now carried out using
    modern agricultural methods.
  • Machinery powered by fossil fuels is now used to
    plow the soil and harvest crops. Synthetic
    chemical fertilizers have replaced manure and
    plant wastes to fertilize soil.
  • A variety of overhead sprinklers and drip systems
    may be used for irrigation. And synthetic
    chemicals are used to kill pests.

19
Fertile Soil The Living Earth
  • Soil that can support the growth of healthy
    plants is called fertile soil.
  • Topsoil is the surface layer of the soil, which
    is usually richer in organic matter than the
    subsoil is.
  • Fertile topsoil is composed of living organisms,
    rock particles, water, air, and organic matter,
    such as dead or decomposing organisms. Several
    layers of soil lie under the topsoil. The bottom
    layer is bedrock, which is the solid rock from
    which most soil originally forms.

20
Fertile Soil The Living Earth
21
Fertile Soil The Living Earth
  • Most soil forms when rock is broken down into
    smaller and smaller fragments by wind, water, and
    chemical weathering. Chemical weathering happens
    when the minerals in rock react chemically with
    substances to form new materials. Temperature
    changes and moisture can also cause rock to crack
    and break apart.
  • It can take hundreds or even thousands of years
    for these geological processes to form a few
    centimeters of soil.

22
Fertile Soil The Living Earth
  • Other processes also help to produce fertile
    topsoil. For example, the rock particles supply
    mineral nutrients to the soil.
  • Fungi and bacteria live in the soil, and they
    decompose dead plants as well as organic debris
    and add more nutrients to the soil.
  • Earthworms, insects, and other small animals help
    plants grow by breaking up the soil and allowing
    air and water into it.

23
Soil Erosion A Global Problem
  • Erosion is a process in which the materials of
    the Earths surface are loosened, dissolved, or
    worn away and transported from one place to
    another by a natural agent, such as wind, water,
    ice, or gravity.
  • In the U.S., about half of the original topsoil
    has been lost to erosion in the past 200 years.
  • Without topsoil, crops cannot be grown. Yet,
    almost all farming methods increase the rate of
    soil erosion.

24
Soil Erosion A Global Problem
25
Land Degradation
  • Land degradation happens when human activity or
    natural processes damage the land so that it can
    no longer support the local ecosystem. In areas
    with dry climates, desertification can occur.
  • Desertification is the process by which human
    activities or climatic changes make arid or
    semiarid areas more desertlike.
  • This process is causing some of our arable land
    to disappear.

26
Soil Conservation
  • There are many ways of protecting and managing
    topsoil and reducing erosion.
  • Soil usually erodes downhill, and many soil
    conservation methods are designed to prevent
    downhill erosion.
  • For example, soil-retaining terraces can be build
    across a hillside. On gentler slopes, contour
    plowing, which consists of plowing across the
    slope of a hill instead of up and down the slope,
    can be used.

27
Soil Conservation
  • An even more effective method of plowing is
    leaving strips of vegetation across the hillside
    instead of plowing the entire slope.
  • These strips catch soil and water that run down
    the hill.
  • Still, many areas of land that have hills are not
    suited to farming, but may be better used as
    forest or grazing land.

28
Soil Conservation
  • In no-till farming, a crop is harvested without
    turning the soil over, as in traditional farming.
  • Later, the seeds of the next crop are planted
    among the remains of the previous crop. The
    remains of the first crop hold the soil in place
    while the new crop develops.
  • Although this method saves time and reduces soil
    erosion, it is not suited for all crops. Other
    disadvantages include soil that is too densely
    packed and lower crop yields over time.

29
Enriching the Soil
  • Soil was traditionally fertilized by adding
    organic matter that would decompose, adding
    nutrients to the soil and improving the soil
    texture.
  • However, inorganic fertilizers that contain
    nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium have changed
    farming methods. Without them, world food
    production would be less than half of what it is
    today.
  • If erosion occurs in areas fertilized with
    inorganic materials, waterways may become
    polluted.

30
Enriching the Soil
  • Over the past 50 years, the use of such inorganic
    fertilizers has increased rapidly.

31
Enriching the Soil
  • A modern method of enhancing the soil is to use
    both organic and inorganic materials by adding
    compost and chemical fertilizers to the soil.
  • Compost is a mixture of decomposing organic
    matter, such as manure and rotting plants, that
    is used as fertilizer and soil conditioner.
  • Many cities and industries now compost yard and
    crop wastes. This compost is then sold to farmers
    and gardeners, and the process is saving costly
    land fill space.

32
Salinization
  • The accumulation of salts in the soil is known as
    salinization.
  • Salinization is a major problem in places that
    have low rainfall and naturally salty soil.
  • When water evaporates from irrigated land, salts
    are left behind.
  • Salinization can be slowed if irrigation canals
    are lined to prevent water from seeping into the
    soil, or if the soil is watered heavily to wash
    out salts.

33
Salinization
  • The accumulation of salts in the soil is known as
    salinization.
  • Salinization is a major problem in places that
    have low rainfall and naturally salty soil.
  • When water evaporates from irrigated land, salts
    are left behind.
  • Salinization can be slowed if irrigation canals
    are lined to prevent water from seeping into the
    soil, or if the soil is watered heavily to wash
    out salts.

34
Pest Control
  • Worldwide, pests destroy about one-third of the
    worlds potential food harvest.
  • A pest is any organism that occurs where it is
    not wanted or that occurs in large enough numbers
    to cause economic damage.
  • Humans try to control populations of many types
    of pests, including plants, fungi, insects, and
    microorganisms.

35
Pesticides
  • Many farmers rely on pesticides to produce their
    crops.
  • A pesticide is a poison used to destroy pests,
    such as insects, rodents, or weeds examples
    include insecticides, rodenticides, and
    herbicides.
  • Pesticides, however, can also harm beneficial
    plants and insects, wildlife, and even people.

36
Pesticide Resistance
  • Over time, spraying large amounts of pesticide to
    get rid of pests usually makes the pest problem
    worse.
  • Pest populations may evolve resistance, the
    ability to survive exposure to a particular
    pesticide.
  • More than 500 species of insects have developed
    resistance to pesticides since the 1940s.

37
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38
Human Health Concerns
  • Pesticides are designed to kill organisms, so
    they may also be dangerous to humans.
  • Cancer rates among children in areas where large
    amounts of pesticides are used on crops are
    sometimes higher than the national average.
  • People who apply pesticides need to follow safety
    guidelines to protect themselves from contact
    with these chemicals.

39
Pollution and Persistence
  • The problem of pesticides harming people and
    other organisms is especially serious with
    pesticides that are persistent.
  • A pesticide is persistent if it does not break
    down easily or quickly in the environment.
  • Persistent pesticides do not break down into
    harmless chemicals, and they accumulate in the
    water and soil.
  • Some pesticides have been banned in the United
    States for decades but can still be detected in
    the environment.

40
Biological Pest Control
  • Biological pest control is the use of certain
    organisms by humans to eliminate or control
    pests.
  • Every pest has enemies in the wild, and these
    enemies can sometimes be used to control
    pest populations.
  • Biological pest control includes the use of
  • pathogens,
  • plant defenses,
  • chemicals from plants,
  • and the disruption of insect breeding

41
Integrated Pest Management
  • Integrated pest management is a modern method of
    controlling pests on crops.
  • The goal of integrated pest management is not to
    eliminate pest populations but to reduce pest
    damage to a level that causes minimal economic
    damage.
  • Such programs can include a mix of farming
    methods, biological pest control, and chemical
    pest control.

42
Integrated Pest Management
43
Integrated Pest Management
  • Biological methods are the first methods used to
    control the pest. So, natural predators,
    pathogens, and parasites of the pest may be
    introduced.
  • Cultivation controls, such as vacuuming insects
    off the plants, can also be used.
  • As a last resort, small amounts of insecticides
    may be used. These insecticides are changed over
    time to reduce the ability of pests to evolve
    resistance.

44
Engineering a Better Crop
  • Genetic engineering is a technology in which the
    genome of a living cell is modified for medical
    or industrial use.
  • Scientists may use genetic engineering to
    transfer desirable traits, such as resistance to
    certain pests, from one organism to another.
  • Plants that result from genetic engineering are
    called genetically modified (GM) plants.

45
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46
Engineering a Better Crop
47
Implications of Genetic Engineering
  • In the United States, we now eat and use
    genetically engineered agricultural products
    everyday.
  • Many of these products, however, have not been
    fully tested for their environmental impacts.
  • Some scientists warn that these products will
    cause problems in the future.

48
Sustainable Agriculture
  • Farming that conserves natural resources and
    helps keep the land productive indefinitely is
    called sustainable agriculture.
  • Sustainable agriculture involves planting
    productive, pest-resistant crop varieties that
    require little energy, pesticides, fertilizer,
    and water.

49
Objectives
  • Explain how overharvesting affects the supply of
    aquatic organisms used for food.
  • Describe the current role of aquaculture in
    providing seafood.
  • Describe the importance of livestock in providing
    food and other products.

50
Animals and Agriculture
  • Food from animals has been the basis of life for
    some human populations for centuries.
  • Our ancestors obtained animal protein by hunting
    and fishing. Today, most people get animal
    protein from domesticated species.
  • Domesticated describes organisms that have been
    bred and managed for human use.

51
Food from Water
  • Because fish are an important food source for
    humans, the harvesting of fish has become an
    important industry worldwide.
  • However, when too many fish are harvested over a
    long period of time, ecological systems can be
    damaged.

52
Food from Water
The North Atlantic cod fishery has collapsed
because too many fish were harvested over time.
53
  • Overharvesting is the catching or removing from a
    population more organisms than the population can
    replace.
  • Many governments are now trying to stop
    overharvesting. They have created no-fishing
    zones, so that fish populations can recover.

54
  • Aquaculture is the raising of aquatic plants and
    animals for human use or consumption.
  • Fish and other aquatic organisms provide up to 20
    percent of the animal protein consumed worldwide.
  • Aquaculture may be one solution to the
    overharvesting of fish and other organisms in
    the worlds oceans.

55
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56
Aquaculture
  • Aquaculture is not a new idea.
  • This practice probably began in China about 4,000
    years ago.
  • Today, China leads the world in using aquaculture
    to produce freshwater fish.

57
Aquaculture
  • There are a number of different methods of
    aquaculture. Among these are
  • Fish farming
  • Fish ranching
  • Fish farms generally consist of many individual
    ponds that each contain fish at a specific stage
    of development. Fish grow to maturity in the
    ponds and are then harvested.
  • Fish ranches raise fish to a certain age, release
    them to the ocean, and then harvest the adults
    when they return to their birthplace to breed.

58
Aquaculture
  • As with other methods of food production,
    however, aquaculture can cause environmental
    damage if not managed properly.
  • Aquatic organisms can produce a large amount of
    waste, which can be a source of pollution.
  • Because aquaculture requires so much water, the
    process can deplete local water supplies.
  • Despite these problems, aquaculture will continue
    to be an important source of protein for the
    human diet.

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60
Livestock
  • Livestock is the term given to domesticated
    animals that are raised to be used on a farm or
    ranch or to be sold for profit.
  • Populations of livestock have changed
    dramatically in the last 50 years.
  • Large livestock operations produce most of the
    meat that is consumed in developed countries.

61
Livestock
62
Ruminants
  • Ruminants are cud-chewing mammals that have a
    three- or four-chambered stomach.
  • Cattle, sheep, and goats are examples of
    ruminants.
  • Cud is the food that these animals regurgitate
    from the first chamber of their stomachs and chew
    again to aid digestion.
  • When we eat the meat of ruminants, we are using
    them to convert plant material, such as grass
    stems and woody shrubs, into food that we can
    digestsuch as beef.

63
Poultry
  • Since 1961, the population of chickens worldwide
    has increased to a greater percentage than the
    population of any other livestock.
  • Chickens are a type of poultry, domesticated
    birds raised for meat and eggs.
  • In more-developed countries, chickens and turkeys
    are usually raised in factory farms.
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