soil, agriculture, and future of food chapter 7. chapter outline feeding 7 billion-agriculture...
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Soil, Agriculture, and Future of Food
Chapter 7
Chapter outline• Feeding 7 Billion-Agriculture Practices,
Past, Present and Future• Soil-Structure, Formation, Traits and
Agriculture• Keeping Dirt Healthy• Growing Crops
Do Now:• Read page133-134 on case study and
complete a Bubble Map describing Iowa’s Farmers Practice of No-Till Agricuture in notes
• For your frame of reference:– Green: Source of information (p133-134)
Blue: Point of View (How has this practice helped the Iowa farmer?)
Red: So what? So Why? (Why is this information/case study important?)
FEEDING 7 BILLION
Agricultural Practices-Past, Present and Future
Central Case Study: Iowa’s Farmers Practice No-Till Agriculture
• Repeated plowing and planting damage soil• No-till farming benefits soil
– Saves time and money– Does not decrease production– Can help make agriculture sustainable
• Other conservation measures: – Careful use of fertilizers– Preventing erosion– Retiring fragile soils
Today, we produce more food per person
• Food production currently exceeds population growth– But not everyone has enough to eat
By 2050, we will have to feed 9 billion people
Issues Facing Us Today:
• Food security: guarantee of an adequate, safe, nutritious, and reliable food supply– Providing food security to everyone will be one of
our greatest challenges
• Undernutrition: receiving fewer calories than one’s minimum dietary energy requirements – 925 million people do not have enough to eat
– Every 5 seconds a child starves to death
– Is due to poverty, politics, conflict, and inefficiencies in distribution
Food security
• After declining for four decades, the number and percentage of hungry people increased in 2008–2009– Higher food prices and the economic slump
• The number of undernourished declined in 2010• Hunger levels, as a percentage of population, are lower
than in the 1970s
Indicators of hunger recently increased
Overnutrition and malnutrition
Overnutrition: receiving too many calories each day– Leads to heart disease, diabetes, etc.– In the U.S., 60% of adults are overweight, 25% are obese– Worldwide, over 500 million people are obese– These numbers will rise to 2.3 billion overweight and 700 million
obese by 2015• Malnutrition: a shortage of nutrients the body needs
– The diet lacks adequate vitamins and minerals – Can lead to diseases
Malnutrition can lead to diseases
• Kwashiorkor: occurs when diet lacks protein or essential amino acids– Occurs when children stop breast-
feeding– Bloated stomach, mental and
physical disabilities• Marasmus: is due to protein
deficiency and insufficient calories – Wasting of the body
• Anemia and deficiency in iodine and vitamin A are also prevalent
Biofuels can affect food supplies!
• Biofuels: fuels derived from organic materials– Replace petroleum in engines
• Ethanol: a biofuel derived from corn– The main biofuel in the U.S. – 2007 subsidies doubled U.S. production
• Use of corn for biofuel reduced corn supplies– Food prices increased – Farmers sold corn for ethanol, not food– Farmers planted biofuels, not food crops– Riots erupted in many nations
Sum up:
• What issues are facing us today?
AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES
The changing face of agriculture
• 10,000 years ago, people in different cultures began to raise plants for food and to domesticate animals
• Agriculture: practice of raising crops and livestock for human use and consumption
• Cropland: land used to raise plants for human use • Rangeland: land used for grazing livestock • Land devoted to agriculture now covers 38% of
Earth’s land
The changing face of agriculture
• Traditional agriculture: uses human and animal power– Hand tools, simple machines– Polyculture: different crops are planted in one field
• Industrial agriculture: uses large-scale machines and fossil fuels to boost yields– Also uses irrigation, fertilizers, and pesticides
• Monoculture: planting a single, genetically similar crop – More efficient but reduces diversity, is disease prone– Narrows the human diet– Used in industrial agriculture
Seed banks conserve wild genes
• Industrial agriculture’s use of genetically similar crops has led to efforts to conserve wild relatives of crops– Wild crops contain genes will will need in the future
• Seed banks: institutions that store seed types– Seeds are collected, stored, and periodically planted
• Wild crops must not be allowed to interbreed with genetically modified crops– To prevent introduction of GM crops into wild
populations
The Green Revolution increased yields(Industrial Agriculture)
• Green revolution: drastically increased food through new• Technology• Crop varieties• Farming practices
• Spread to the developing world in the 1940s • Wheat, rice, corn
Norman Borlaug won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work
The effects of industrialized agriculture (Green Revolution)
• Industrial agriculture has allowed food production to keep pace with population growth– But it has many bad environmental and social effects
• Benefits: increases crop yields while reducing pressure to develop natural areas for new farms
• Drawbacks: water, fossil fuels, fertilizers, pesticides worsen pollution, erosion, and desertification– Requires far more energy than traditional methods– Displaces low-income farmers who can’t afford the
technology, forcing them to move to cities (saw in Dirt Movie)
Sustainable agriculture
• Suitable farmland is disappearing– We must improve the efficiency of production
• It is better to raise animals and crops that pollute less, require less fuels, and have less impact on natural systems
• Sustainable agriculture: maintains healthy soil, clean water, and genetic diversity– Treats agricultural systems as ecosystems
• Low-input agriculture: uses smaller amounts of– Pesticide, fertilizers, growth hormones, antibiotics,
water, and fossil fuels than industrial agriculture
ALL ABOUT SOIL
Soil: the foundation for agriculture
• Soil: a complex system consisting of disintegrated rock, organic matter, water, gases, nutrients, microorganisms – A renewable resource that can
be depleted if abused
• Soil contains: – Dead and living
microorganisms– Decaying material– Bacteria, fungi, worms,
insects, burrowing animals
Soil influences ecosystems as much as climate, latitude, and elevation
Soil forms slowly
• Parent material: the base geologic material of soil– Lava, volcanic ash, rock, dunes– Bedrock: solid rock comprising Earth’s crust
• Weathering: physical, chemical, and biological processes that form that convert rocks into soil– Biological deposition, decomposition, and
accumulation provide organic matter and nutrients• Humus: spongy, fertile material formed by partial
decomposition of organic matter– Holds moisture and is productive for plants
A soil profile consists of horizons
• Horizon: each layer of soil– Soil can have up to six horizons
• Soil profile: the cross-section of soil as a whole
• Leaching: movement of dissolved particles down through horizons– Can deprive plants of nutrients
• Topsoil: inorganic and organic material most nutritive for plants– Vital for agriculture
Regional differences in soils affect agriculture
• In rainforests, rain leaches minerals and nutrients, reducing their accessibility to roots– Rapid decomposition of leaf litter results in a thin
topsoil layer with little humus
– Farming quickly depletes the soil’s fertility
• Temperate prairies have lower rainfall and less nutrient leaching, resulting in higher fertility
SOIL EROSION AND DEGRADATION
Soil erosion
• Soil degradation: loss of soil quality and productivity
– Has caused 13% loss of grain production
• Each year, we lose 12–17 million acres of cropland
– Erosion, nutrient depletion, water scarcity, salinization, waterlogging, pollution, loss of organic matter
• Erosion: transport or removal of material from one place to another
– By wind or water
– A problem when it happens faster than soil formation
• Deposition: dropping out of sediments or arrival of eroded material at a new place
Humans make land vulnerable to erosion
• Land is made vulnerable to erosion through:– Overcultivating fields – poor planning, excessive
tilling– Overgrazing rangeland with too many animals– Clearing forests on steep slopes or with large clear-
cuts
Erosion removes valuable topsoil, especially in areas with steeper slopes, greater precipitation intensities, and sparse vegetation
Soil erosion is a global problem
• Humans are the primary cause of erosion– It is occurring at unnaturally high rates
• In Africa, erosion could reduce crop yields by 50% over the next 40 years
• The U.S. loses 5 tons of soil for every ton of grain harvested
Degradation of topsoil and decreased crop yields, added to population growth are leading agriculture’s future to a
crisis situation
Desertification reduces productivity
• Desertification: form of soil degradation- loss of more than 10% productivity in soil– Erosion, soil compaction, deforestation, overgrazing– Drought, salinization, water depletion, climate change
• Most prone areas: arid and semi-arid lands (drylands)• Desertification endangers the food supply of 1 billion people in
over 100 countries– Costing tens of billions of dollars each year
• Climate change will worsen desertification by changing rainfall patterns– 50 million people will be displaced in 10 years
The Dust Bowl
• In late 1800 and early 1900, farmers and ranchers:– Grew wheat, grazed cattle– Removed native grasses
• Dust Bowl: 1930s drought and erosion caused “black blizzards” of sand
• Thousands of farmers left their land – Relied on governmental help
to survive
SOIL CONSERVATION
The Soil Conservation Service (SCS)
• Started in 1935 by the Congress, the SCS works with farmers to develop conservation plans for farms– The SCS is now named the Natural Resources
Conservation Service
• Other countries started their own conservation agencies– No-till farming in Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay– Grassroots organizations helped by agronomists and
government extension agents
Protecting soil: crop rotation and contour farming
• Crop rotation: growing different crops from one year to the next – Returns nutrients to soil – Prevents erosion, reduces
pests– Wheat or corn and
soybeans• Contour farming: plowing
perpendicularly across a hill
– Furrows slow runoff and capture soil
Protecting soil: terracing and intercropping
• Terracing: level platforms cut into steep hillsides– This “staircase” contains
rain and irrigation water
• Intercropping: planting different crops in alternating bands- Increases ground cover- Decreases pests and
disease- Replenishes soil
Protecting soil: shelterbelts and reduced tillage
• Shelterbelts (windbreaks): rows of trees planted along edges of fields – Slows the wind– Can be combined with
intercropping• Conservation tillage:
reduces the amount of tilling– No-till farming disturbs
the soil even less
Conservation tillage saves soil
• Increases organic matter and soil biota– Reducing erosion and improving soil quality
• Stores carbon in the soil and reduces fossil fuel use
Conservation tillage is used on 40% of U.S. farmland
• Minimizes increased use of herbicides and fertilizer– Uses green manure
(dead plants as fertilizer) and rotates fields with cover crops
ISSUES AND SOLUTIONS RELATING TO SOIL USE
Overgrazing causes soil degradation
70% of the world’s rangeland is degraded, costing $23.3 billion/year
• Humans keep over 3.4 billion cows, sheep, and goats• Overgrazing: too many animals eat too much of the plant
cover and impede plant regrowth– Soil is degraded and compacted– Increased erosion makes it hard for plants to grow– Non-native plants invade, which are less palatable to
livestock and outcompete native vegetation• Ranchers in the western U.S. are finding ways to ranch
more sustainably and protect the land’s health
Effects of overgrazing can be striking
Overgrazing sets into motion consequences that degrade soil and grassland ecosystems
Agricultural subsidies affect soil degradation
• Theoretically, the market should discourage farmers and ranchers from degrading the land– But degradation is slow, and farmers can’t afford to lose money
• Many governments spend billions to subsidize agriculture– 20% of a U.S. farmer’s income comes from subsidies
• Pros of subsidies: protect farmers from uncertain weather• Cons of subsidies: encourage farming of vulnerable land
– Producing more food than needed, driving prices down– Farmers should buy insurance against losses
U.S. programs promote soil conservation
• Conservation Reserve Program (1985): farmers are paid to put highly erodible land in conservation reserves– Trees and grasses are planted instead of crops– Each dollar spent saves 1 ton of topsoil– Generates income for farmers – Improves water quality and provides habitat– $1.8 billion/yr protects 30–40 million acres
• The 2008 Farm Bill limits protection to 32 million acres– But funds 14 other programs
• International agencies also promote sustainable agriculture
Irrigation: productivity with problems
• Irrigation: artificially providing water to support agriculture– Unproductive regions
become productive farmland• Waterlogging: water suffocates
roots in overirrigated soils • Salinization: the buildup of
salts in surface soil layers– Worse in dryland areas
Salinization inhibits production of 20% of irrigated cropland, costing over $11 billion/year
Sustainable approaches to irrigation
• Match crops and climate– Don’t plant water-guzzling
crops in dry areas – Plant beans or wheat, not rice
• Subsidies make irrigation water artificially cheap
• Drip irrigation delivers water directly to plants
Drip irrigation works best on smaller plots with perennial plants (fruit trees)
Fertilizers boost yields
• Fertilizers: substances containing essential nutrients to enhance crop production
• Inorganic fertilizers: mined or synthetically manufactured mineral supplements
• Organic fertilizers: the remains or wastes of organisms– Manure, crop residues, fresh vegetation (green
manure)– Compost: produced when decomposers break down
organic matter
Inorganic fertilizers cause problems
• Inorganic fertilizers have boosted production– But also severely pollute
• Leaching and runoff of inorganic fertilizers causes:– Groundwater
contamination– Dead zones in water
systems– Air pollution from
evaporated nitratesInorganic fertilizer use has skyrocketed worldwide
Sustainable fertilizers
• Sustainable approaches to fertilizing delivers nutrients directly to plant roots and avoids overapplication– Add fertilizers to drip irrigation water– No-till or low-till systems inject fertilizers with seeds– Monitor soil nutrients and add only when they are low– Strips of vegetation along field edges and streams capture
nutrient runoff• Organic fertilizers add nutrients and organic matter
– Improving soil structure, nutrient and water retention• Integrate inorganic and organic fertilizer systems
Pesticides control pests
• Pest: any organism that damages valuable crops • Weed: any plant that competes with crops• Pests and weeds especially threaten monocultures• Pesticides: poisons that target pest organisms
– Insecticides kill insects, herbicides kill plants, and fungicides kill fungi
• 75% of pesticides are applied to agricultural land• Exposure to synthetic pesticides can cause health problems for
humans and other organisms• Pesticides also kill many nontarget organisms
Exit Ticket- on socrative.com
• 1. How do humans make land vunerable to erosion?
• 2. What is desertification and give an example?
• 3. Which method of farming increases ground cover, decreases pests and replenishes soil?
PESTS, BUGS AND THEIR CONTROL
Pests evolve resistance to pesticides
• Pesticides lose effectiveness as pests evolve resistance• Individuals that can metabolize and detoxify a pesticide survive
and pass these genes to their offspring– As the population increases, pesticides lose their effectiveness
• Pesticide treadmill: chemists increase the toxicity of pesticides to compete with resistant pests
• Many species (green peach aphid, diamondback moth) have evolved resistance to multiple chemicals
Evolution of pesticide resistance
• Over 586 species are resistant to 330 insecticides• Hundreds of weeds and plant diseases have evolved resistance
to herbicides and pesticides
Biological control (biocontrol)
• Biological control: uses a pest’s predators or diseases to control the pest– But organisms can’t be
easily controlled
• Organisms can harm nontargets– Example: introduced cactus
moths eat rare Florida cacti
• Biocontrol must be carefully planned and regulated
Integrated pest management (IPM)
• Techniques to suppress pests include:* Biocontrol * Habitat alteration
* Chemicals, if necessary * Crop rotation
* Population monitoring * Transgenic crops
* Alternative tillage methods
* Mechanical pest removal
IPM in Indonesia increased rice yields 13% and saved $179 million/yr in phased-out subsidies
Pollinators are beneficial “bugs”
• Not all insects are pests; some are absolutely vital– Over 800 cultivated plants rely on pollinators
• Pollination: male plant sex cells fertilize female sex cells• Flowers are evolutionary adaptations to attract pollinators
– Nectar, pollen, sweet smells, bright colors• U.S. bees provide $3 billion/year in pollination services, but
parasitic mites decimated populations– Beekeepers were driven to financial ruin
Conservation of pollinators is vital
• Colony collapse disorder: entire beehives have died– One-third of all U.S. honeybees die/year– Unknown causes—Insecticides? Parasites? Stress?
Populations of bees further plummeted in 2006
GMOS, AQUACULTUREFuture of Food
Genetically modified food
• Despite the Green Revolution, relentless population growth demands more innovation to feed us
• Scientists alter genes of organisms– Crop plants and livestock
• Genetically modified organisms enhance nutrition and agricultural efficiency
• But the risks are not well understood, leading to anxiety and protest from:– Consumer advocates, small farmers, environmentalists, critics
of big business
Genetically modified organisms
• Genetic engineering: laboratory manipulation of genetic material– Add, delete, modify DNA
• Genetically modified (GM) organisms: organisms that have been genetically engineered using …
• Recombinant DNA: DNA created from multiple organisms
Biotechnology is impacting our lives
• The goal of genetic engineering: put genes that code for desirable traits (rapid growth, nutrition, etc.)– Into organisms lacking those traits
• Transgenic organism: an organism that contains DNA from another species – Transgenes: the genes that have moved between organisms
• Biotechnology: the application of biological science to create products derived from organisms – It has created medicines, cleaned up pollution, dissolved blood
clots, and made better food
Some genetically modified foods
Selective breeding vs. genetic engineering
• Selective breeding: changes organisms through selective breeding of the same or similar species– Works with organisms in the field– Genes come together on their own– Uses the process of selection to change organisms
• Genetic engineering: mixes genes of different species (e.g., spiders and goats)– Works with genetic material in the lab– Directly creates novel combinations of genes– Resembles the process of mutation
Biotechnology is changing our world
• GM foods are a big business
• Most GM crops are herbicide and pesticide resistant– Large-scale farmers grow
crops more efficiently– Most U.S. corn, soybeans,
and cotton are genetically modified
What are the impacts of GM crops?
• As GM crops expanded, citizens, scientists, and policymakers became concerned that:– GM crops could have adverse impacts on human health– Pests could evolve resistance and become “superpests” and
“superweeds”– GM crops could harm nontarget organisms– GM crops could interbreed with closely related wild plants
• Millions of Americans eat GM foods without obvious harm– But it is too early to dismiss concerns
Some impacts of GM crops
• Mixed results on pesticide use– Insecticide use declined, but herbicide use increased
• GM foods can advance sustainable agriculture– Grown with no-till farming– Drought resistant and high-yielding
• Problems with GM foods: – Expensive– Little incentive to develop crops for small-scale
farmers
Genetic engineering is profit driven
• This “gene revolution” is driven by financial interests of corporations• A few large agribiotech corporations dominate the world’s
food supply
• Europeans want GM foods labeled• U.S. consumers have mostly accepted GM crops• Brazil, India, and China are aggressively
pursuing GM crops• We should follow the precautionary principle
and proceed with caution on GM foods
Consumption of animal products is growing
• As wealth and commerce increase, so does consumption of meat, milk, and eggs
• Since 1950, global meat production has increased fivefold, and per capita meat consumption has doubled
As developing nations become wealthier, meat consumption will double
by 2050
Our food choices are also energy choices
• Eating meat is far less energy efficient than eating crops
• 90% of energy is lost from one trophic level to the next
• Some animals convert grain into meat more efficiently than others
Resources needed for livestock production
When we choose what to eat, we choose how we use resources
• Land and water are needed to raise food for livestock– Eggs and chicken meat
require the least – Producing beef requires
the most
Feedlot agriculture
• Feedlots (factory farms): also called concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs)
• Huge warehouses or pens deliver food to animals living at extremely high densities– House over half of the world’s pork and most of its poultry
Most U.S. meat is raised in feedlots, which use liberal amounts of antibiotics to control disease
Pros and cons of feedlot agriculture
• It allows greater production of affordable meat• It reduces grazing impacts on the land• 45% of the world’s grain is fed to livestock
– Endangering food security for the world’s poor• Feedlots produce huge amounts of manure and urine
– Can pollute surface water and groundwater• Crowded housing causes outbreaks in disease
– Heavy use of antibiotics• More greenhouse gases (CO2, methane, nitrous oxides) than
automobile emissions
We raise seafood with aquaculture
• World wild fish populations are plummeting– Increased demand and technology
• Aquaculture: raising aquatic organisms in a controlled environment – Open-water pens or land-
based ponds
• The fastest-growing type of food production– Most widespread in Asia
Aquaculture’s benefits and drawbacks
• Benefits:– Reduces pressure on overharvested wild fish– Uses fewer fossil fuels, is safer, and produces more
fish than commercial fishing
• Drawbacks:– Lots of waste produced– Uses grain, which affects food supplies for people– Fish meal is made from wild ocean fish– Escaped fish introduce disease or outcompete wild
fish
Organic agriculture
• Sustainable agriculture keeps high crop yields, minimizes resource use, and decreases environmental impacts
• Organic agriculture: uses no synthetic fertilizers, insecticides, fungicides, or herbicides
• Organic Food Production Act (1990) establishes national standards for organic products– The USDA issued criteria in 2000 by which food could
be labeled organic– California, Washington, Texas passed stricter
guidelines for labeling
Benefits and costs of organic farming
• Farmers have lower input costs, enhanced income, reduced chemical pollution and soil degradation– Obstacles include the risks and costs of switching to
new methods• The main obstacle to consumers is the higher
price– But many are willing to pay the price– Worldwide, sales surpassed $54 billion
Organic agriculture is booming
U.S. land devoted to organic agriculture has quadrupled since the mid-1990s
U.S. consumers spent $24.8 billion on organic food in 2009
Governments can support organic farming
• The U.S. 2008 Farm Bill gives $112 million over 5 years for organic agriculture– It helps defray certification costs
• In 1993, the European Union started supporting farmers financially during conversion to organic farming– Reduced inputs and higher market prices will make it
as profitable as conventional methods
Locally supported agriculture is growing
• Sustainable agriculture reduces fossil fuel use from long-distance transport of products– The average U.S. food product travels 1,400 miles
• Farmers’ markets: provide fresh, locally grown food– Provide organic items and unique local varieties
• Community-supported agriculture (CSA) – Consumers pay farmers in advance for produce– Consumers get fresh food– Farmers get a guaranteed income
Sustainable agriculture: a roadmap for the future
• Sustainable agriculture mimics natural ecosystems– They operate in cycles and are internally stabilized by
negative feedback loops
• Agricultural systems can be integrated with the surrounding ecosystems– Reducing environmental impacts from food production
• Making agriculture sustainable is crucial for all of us
Conclusion
• Industrialized agriculture has had substantial negative environmental consequences
• To support 9 billion humans, we must shift to sustainable agriculture to prevent further land degradation– Biological pest control, organic agriculture– Pollinator protection, preservation of native crops– Aquaculture– Careful, responsible genetic modification of food