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Agriculture

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Agriculture For the last 10,000 years humans have been practicing agriculture, or simply put, farming. Farming has allowed us to feed many people and have food year round – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Agriculture


1
Agriculture
  • For the last 10,000 years humans have been
    practicing agriculture, or simply put, farming.
  • Farming has allowed us to feed many people and
    have food year round
  • Todays farming is very different than it was in
    the past

2
Traditional Agriculture
  • Traditional, or conventional, agriculture is how
    most of our food is made.
  • It is large scale, industrial and designed to
    make the most amount of food with the smallest
    amount of space

3
What you think it looks like..
4
What it really looks like
5
What you think it looks like
6
What it really looks like
7
Monocultures
  • A monoculture is an area of land that only grows
    a large amount of one crop.
  • This makes it very easy for pests to destroy the
    crops.
  • As a result, pesticides are used.

8
Pesticides
  • Pesticides damage soil and can run off into the
    surrounding area

9
Pesticides
  • If a small amount of the pests survives and are
    resistant to the pesticide, then they will
    repopulate and a stronger, more toxic pesticide
    must be used.

10
Fertilizers
  • Since the soil gets degraded quickly, fertilizers
    must be added to the soil.
  • Fertilizer runoff causes eutrophication which
    means too much of a good thing because the
    added nutrients cause algae to flourish and choke
    out aquatic ecosystems

11
Where are we?
  • What are the
  • Strengths
  • and
  • Weaknesses
  • of our current agricultural system?

12
Successes
  • abundant food supply in the developed world
  • fresh fruits and vegetables available year-round
  • cheap food
  • luxury foods such as coffee, tea, chocolate, and
    spices easily available around the world
  • effective food preservation technologies
    (refrigeration, freezing, canning, packaging)
  • convenience foods
  • mechanization produces high labor efficiency
  • improvements in soil conservation
  • availability of agricultural inputs for quick
    solutions to production problems

13
Problems
  • continuing soil loss
  • food safety concerns (mad cow disease, food
    poisoning outbreaks, antibiotic resistance,
    toxins and pesticides)
  • water pollution, air pollution ( odors), habitat
    loss, water depletion
  • continuing hunger and rise of obesity
  • failing farms, economic uncertainty and stress
  • declining communities
  • farm accidents, chronic diseases linked to
    agricultural chemicals
  • reliance on fossil fuels, global warming
  • farmland loss to development, ugly countryside
  • difficulty of starting in farming

14
What is Sustainable Agriculture?
  • a journey, not a destination
  • Iowa Farmer

15
Sustainable Agriculture
  • an integrated system of plant and animal
    production practicesthat will
  • satisfy human food and fiber needs
  • enhance environmental quality
  • make the most efficient use of
  • nonrenewable resources
  • sustain economic viability
  • enhance quality of life.
  • 1990 Farm Bill

16
The three-legged stool of sustainability
17
Economically sustainable
  • Provides a secure living for farm families
  • Provides a secure living to other workers in the
    food system
  • Provides access to good food for all

18
Environmentally Sound
  • Preserves
  • the
  • quality of
  • soil,
  • water,
  • and air

19
Environmentally Sound
  • Cooperates
  • with and
  • is modeled
  • on natural
  • systems

20
Socially sustainable
  • Good for families
  • Supports communities
  • Fair to all involved

21
How to farm sustainably
  • Farmers plant many different crops near each
    other so that a pest cant destroy an entire crop
  • Waste products are composted and used to replace
    nutrients in the soil.
  • Crops are rotated to preserve the nutrients in
    the soil.

22
How to farm sustainably
  • Animals are treated fairly and given the freedom
    to move.
  • Animals are not given unnecessary antibiotics.
  • Animals are fed properly

23
Conclusion
  • Agriculture has accomplished much
  • There are still many problems to solve, both old
    and new
  • Sustainable agriculture is about trying to solve
    these problems without creating new ones.

24
How much is 2 billion bushels?
  • Iowas annual corn harvest is usually around 2
    billion bushels. If you loaded semi trucks with 2
    billion bushels and lined them up bumper to
    bumper, how far would they stretch?
  • According to the Iowa Department of
    Transportation, a large semi holds around 910
    bushels, and 879 large semis lined up bumper to
    bumper would stretch around 11.5 miles

25
Answer
  • The line of trucks would stretch 29,206 miles, or
    more than the circumference of the earth (which
    is a little under 25,000 miles). Luckily, most
    grain is transported much more efficiently in
    railroad cars and on barges.
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