environmental science 13e chapter 10: food, soil, and pest management

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ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

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Page 1: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e

CHAPTER 10:Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Page 2: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Core Case Study: Is Organic Agriculture the Answer? (1)

• Organic agriculture as a component of sustainable agriculture

• Certified organic farming:– Less than 1% of world cropland

– 0.1% of U.S. cropland

– 6-18% in many European countries

Page 3: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Core Case Study: Is Organic Agriculture the Answer? (2)

• Many environmental advantages over conventional farming

• Requires more human labor• Organic food costs 10-75% more than

conventionally grown food• Cheaper than conventionally grown

food when environmental costs are included

Page 4: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

10-1 What Is Food Security and Why Is It So Difficult to Attain?

• Many of the poor have health problems from not getting enough food, while many people in affluent countries suffer health problems from eating too much.

• The greatest obstacles to providing enough food for everyone are poverty, political upheaval, corruption, war, and the harmful environmental effects of food production.

Page 5: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Poor Lack Sufficient Food

• Enough food for all – but in developing countries 1/6 do not get enough to eat

• Poverty – Food insecurity– Chronic hunger

– Poor nutrition

• Food security

Page 6: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Nutrition

• Macronutrients and micronutrients• Chronic undernutrition• Malnutrition

– Low-protein, high-carbohydrate diet

– Physical and mental health problems

– 6 million children die each year• Vitamin and mineral deficiencies

Page 7: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Overnutrition

• Too many calories, too little exercise, or both

• Similar overall health outlook as undernourished

• 1.6 billion people eat too much• 66% of American adults overweight, 34%

obese– Heart disease and stroke– Type II diabetes and some cancers

Page 8: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

10-2 How Is Food Produced?

• We have used high-input industrialized agriculture and lower-input traditional methods to greatly increase supplies of food.

Page 9: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Where We Get Food (1)

• Major sources:– Croplands

– Rangelands, pastures, and feedlots

– Fisheries and aquaculture

Page 10: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Where We Get Food (2)

• Since 1960 tremendous increase in food supply– Better farm machinery

– High-tech fishing fleets

– Irrigation

– Pesticides and fertilizers

– High-yield varieties

Page 11: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Only a Few Species Feed the World

• Food specialization in small number of crops makes us vulnerable

• 14 plant species provide 90% of world food calories

• 47% of world food calories comes from rice, wheat, and corn

Page 12: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Industrialized Agriculture (1)

• High-input agriculture – monocultures• Large amounts of:

– Heavy equipment– Financial capital– Fossil fuels– Water– Commercial inorganic fertilizers– Pesticides

• Much food produced for global consumption

Page 13: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Industrialized Agriculture (2)

• Plantation agriculture primarily in tropics– Bananas

– Sugarcane

– Coffee

– Vegetables

– Exported primarily to developed countries

Page 14: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Traditional Agriculture

• 2.7 billion people in developing countries

• Traditional subsistence agriculture• Traditional intensive agriculture• Monoculture• Polyculture

Page 15: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Science Focus: Soil is the Base of Life on Land (1)

• Soil composed of– Eroded rock

– Mineral nutrients

– Decaying organic matter

– Water

– Air

– Organisms

Page 16: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Science Focus: Soil is the Base of Life on Land (2)

• Soil is a key component of earth’s natural capital

• Soil profile– O Horizon

– A horizon

– B horizon

– C horizon

Page 17: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Green Revolution

• Three-step green revolution– Selectively bred monocultures– High yields through high inputs – fertilizer,

pesticides, and water– Multiple cropping

• Second green revolution – fast-growing dwarf varieties of wheat and rice

• 1950-1996 – world grain production tripled

Page 18: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Case Study: Industrialized Food Production in the U.S.

• Industrialized farming agribusiness

• Increasing number of giant multinational corporations

• ~10% U.S. income spent on food

• Subsidized through taxes

Page 19: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Case Study: Brazil – The World’s Emerging Food Superpower

• Ample sun, water, and arable land

• EMBRAPA – government agricultural research corporation

• 2-3 crops per year in tropical savanna

• Lack of transportation impeding further growth as food exporter

Page 20: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Production of New Crop Varieties

• Traditional– Crossbreeding– Artificial selection– Slow process

• Genetic engineering– Genetic engineering

• >75% of U.S. supermarket food genetically engineered

Page 21: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Meat Production

• Meat and dairy products are good sources of protein

• Past ~60 years meat production up five-fold

• Half of meat from grazing livestock, other half from feedlots

Page 22: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Fish and Shellfish Production Have Increased Dramatically

• Aquaculture – 46% of fish/shellfish production in 2006– Ponds

– Underwater cages

– China produces 70% of world’s farmed fish

Page 23: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

10-3 What Environmental Problems Arise from Food Production?

• Future food production may be limited by soil erosion and degradation, desertification, water and air pollution, climate change from greenhouse gas emissions, and loss of biodiversity.

Page 24: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Soil Erosion

• Flowing water• Wind• Soil fertility

declines• Water pollution

occurs• Some natural • Much due to

human activity

Page 25: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Drought and Human Activities

• Desertification• Combination of

prolonged draught and human activities

• 70% of world’s drylands used for agriculture

• Will be exacerbated by climate change

Page 26: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Effects of Irrigation

• Leaves behind salts in topsoil

• Salinization– Affects 10% of global croplands

• Waterlogging– Attempts to leach salts deeper but

raises water table

– Affects 10% of global croplands

Page 27: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management
Page 28: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Limits to Expanding Green Revolutions

• High-inputs too expensive for subsistence farmers

• Water not available for increasing population

• Irrigated land per capita dropping• Significant expansion of cropland

unlikely for economic and ecological reasons

Page 29: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Industrialized Food Production Requires Huge Energy Inputs

• Mostly nonrenewable oil– Run machinery– Irrigation– Produce pesticides– Process foods– Transport foods

• In U.S., food travels an average of 1,300 miles from farm to plate

Page 30: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Controversies over Genetically Engineered Foods

• Potential long-term effects on humans

• Ecological effects

• Genes cross with wild plants

• Patents on GMF varieties

Page 31: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management
Page 32: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Food and Biofuel Production Lead to Major Losses of Biodiversity

• Forests cleared

• Grasslands plowed

• Loss of agrobiodiversity– Since 1900, lost 75% of genetic diversity

of crops

– Losing the genetic “library” of food diversity

Page 33: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Industrial Meat Production Consequences

• Uses large amounts of fossil fuels

• Wastes can pollute water

• Overgrazing• Soil compaction• Methane release:

greenhouse gas

Page 34: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Aquaculture Problems

• Fish meal and fish oil as feed– Depletes wild fish

populations

– Inefficient

– Can concentrate toxins such as PCBs

• Produce large amounts of waste

Page 35: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

10-4 How Can We Protect Cropsfrom Pests More Sustainably?

• We can sharply cut pesticide use without decreasing crop yields by using a mix of cultivation techniques, biological pest controls, and small amounts of selected chemical pesticides as a last resort (integrated pest management).

Page 36: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Nature’s Pest Control

• Polycultures – pests controlled by natural enemies

• Monocultures and land clearing– Loss of natural enemies

– Require pesticides

Page 37: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Increasing Pesticide Use

• Up 50-fold since 1950

• Broad-spectrum agents

• Selective agents

• Persistence

• Biomagnification – some pesticides magnified in food chains and webs

Page 38: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Advantages of Modern Pesticides

• Save human lives• Increase food supplies• Increase profits for farmers• Work fast• Low health risks when used properly• Newer pesticides safer and more

effective

Page 39: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Disadvantages of Modern Pesticides

• Pests become genetically resistant• Some insecticides kill natural

enemies• May pollute environment• Harmful to wildlife• Threaten human health• Use has not reduced U.S. crop losses

Page 40: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Pesticide Use

Page 41: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Laws Regulate Pesticides

• Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

• United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)

• Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

• Congressional legislation

• Laws and agency actions criticized

Page 42: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Individuals Matter: Rachel Carson

• Biologist

• DDT effects on birds

• 1962: Silent Spring makes connection between pesticides and threats to species and ecosystems

Page 43: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Science Focus: Ecological Surprises

• Dieldrin killed malaria mosquitoes, but also other insects

• Poison moved up food chain– Lizards and then cats died– Rats flourished– Operation Cat Drop

• Villagers roofs collapsed from caterpillars – natural insect predators eliminated

Page 44: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Alternatives to Pesticides

• Fool the pest• Provide homes for pest enemies• Implant genetic resistance• Natural enemies• Pheromones to trap pests or attract

predators• Hormones to disrupt life cycle

Page 45: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Integrated Pest Management

• Evaluate a crop and its pests as part of ecological system

• Design a program with:– Cultivation techniques

– Biological controls

– Chemical tools and techniques

– Can reduce costs and pesticide use without lowering crop yields

Page 46: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

10-5 How Can We Improve Food Security?

• We can improve food security by creating programs to reduce poverty and chronic malnutrition, relying more on locally grown food, and cutting waste.

Page 47: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Use Government Policies to Improve Food Production and Security

• Control food prices– Helps consumers– Hurts farmers

• Provide subsidies to farmers– Price supports, tax breaks to encourage food

production– Can harm farmers in other countries who don’t

get subsidies– Some analysts call for ending all subsidies

Page 48: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Reducing Childhood Deaths

• $5–$10 annual per child would prevent half of nutrition-related deaths

• Strategies– Immunization– Breast-feeding– Prevent dehydration from diarrhea– Vitamin A – Family planning– Health education for women

Page 49: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

10-6 How Can We Produce Food More Sustainably?

• More sustainable food production involves reducing overgrazing and overfishing, irrigating more efficiently, using integrated pest management, promoting agrobiodiversity, and providing government subsidies only for more sustainable agriculture, fishing, and aquaculture.

Page 50: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Reduce Soil Erosion (1)

• Terracing

• Contour plowing

• Strip cropping

• Alley cropping

• Windbreaks

Page 51: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Reduce Soil Erosion (2)

• Shelterbelts

• Conservation-tillage farming

• No-till farming

• Minimum-tillage farming

• Retire erosion hotspots

Page 52: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Government Intervention

• Governments influence food production– Control prices– Provide subsidies– Let the marketplace decide

• Reduce hunger, malnutrition, and environmental degradation– Slow population growth– Sharply reduce poverty– Develop sustainable low-input agriculture

Page 53: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Case Study: Soil Erosion in the United States

• Dust Bowl in the 1930s

• 1935 Soil Erosion Act– Natural Resources Conservation Service

– Helps farmers and ranchers conserve soil

• One-third topsoil gone– Much of the rest degraded

• Farmers paid to leave farmland fallow

Page 54: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Restoring Soil Fertility

• Organic fertilizers– Animal manure– Green manure– Compost

• Crop rotation uses legumes to restore nutrients

• Inorganic fertilizers – pollution problems

Page 55: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Sustainable Meat Production

• Shift to eating herbivorous fish or poultry

• Eat less meat

• Vegetarian

Page 56: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Shift to More Sustainable Agriculture

• Organic farming

• Perennial crops

• Polyculture

• Renewable energy, not fossil fuels

Page 57: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Six Strategies for Sustainable Agriculture

1. Increase research on sustainable agriculture

2. Set up demonstration projects3. International fund to help poor farmers4. Establish training programs5. Subsidies only for sustainable

agriculture6. Education program for consumers

Page 58: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management
Page 59: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Science Focus: The Land Institute and Perennial Culture

• Polycultures of perennial crops

• Live for years without replanting

• Better adapted to soil and climate conditions

• Less soil erosion and water pollution

• Increases sustainability

Page 60: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Three Big Ideas from This Chapter - #1

About 925 million people have health problems because they do not get enough to eat and 1.6 billion people face health problems from eating too much.

Page 61: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Three Big Ideas from This Chapter - #2

Modern industrialized agriculture ha a greater harmful impact on the environment than any other human activity.

Page 62: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 13e CHAPTER 10: Food, Soil, and Pest Management

Three Big Ideas from This Chapter - #3

More sustainable forms of food production will greatly reduce the harmful environmental impacts of current systems while increasing food security and national security for all countries.