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Sustainable agriculture

Sustainable agriculture. Sustainable ag. “Does not deplete soils faster than they form.” Farming, ranching that does not reduce the amount of healthy soil, clean water, and genetic diversity essential to LONG-TERM crop and livestock production. AP ENVS . WED MAR 19 2014

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Sustainable agriculture

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  1. Sustainable agriculture

  2. Sustainable ag • “Does not deplete soils faster than they form.” • Farming, ranching that does not reduce the amount of healthy soil, clean water, and genetic diversity essential to LONG-TERM crop and livestock production.

  3. AP ENVS WED MAR 19 2014 CHAPTER 12: FORESTRY

  4. CHAPTER 12: FORESTRY • FOREST ECOSYSTEMS AND RESOURCES • FOREST LOSS • FOREST MANAGEMENT • PARKS AND PROTECTED AREAS

  5. FOREST ECOSYSTEMS AND RESOURCES

  6. FOREST ECOSYSTEMS AND RESOURCES • DIFFERENT FORESTS....DIFFERENT BIOMES • VERTICAL COMMUNITIES! • Canopy: leaf-eating insects, birds, arboreal mammals • Forest floor • ECOSYSTEM SERVICES • ??

  7. FOREST ECOSYSTEMS AND RESOURCES • ECOSYSTEM SERVICES • Habitat ------ Biodiversity • Soil stabilization • Slow runoff • Recharge aquifers • Flood control • Oxygen production • CO2 uptake • BEAUTY!

  8. giant california coastal redwoods

  9. giant sequoia

  10. “OLD GROWTH” GENERAL SHERMAN TREE • Height above base[1] 274.9 ft 83.8 m • Circumference at ground[1] 102.6 ft 31.3 m • Maximum diameter at base[1] 36.5 ft 11.1 m • Estimated mass (wet) (1938)[12] 2,105 short tons 1,910 t • AGE: 2,300 – 2,700 YEARS

  11. FOREST RESOURCES

  12. FOREST RESOURCES

  13. RAINFORESTS....SOURCE OF MOST USEFUL DRUGS

  14. FOREST LOSS.....DEFORESTATION

  15. OKAY!?

  16. BUT....LOSS OF “PRIMARY FOREST”--- SECONDARY

  17. PRIMARY FOREST = “OLD GROWTH” • REPLACED BY SMALLER/DIFFERENT TREES • INFERIOR HABITAT

  18. SOLUTIONS? • DEVELOPING COUNTRIES SELL “CONCESSIONS” • Timber companies • Conservation groups • OFFSET CARBON EMISSIONS?? • Worldwide forest loss = 12-25% greenhouse emissions = all the world’s vehicles!

  19. forest management

  20. forest management • A TYPE OF “RESOURCE MANAGEMENT” • AVOID THE ___________ ___ ___ ___________ • “MAXIMUM SUSTAINABLE YIELD” • “How to achieve the maximum amount of resource extraction......BUT without depleting the resource from one harvest to the next.” • ALSO: • Ecosystem-based management • Harvesting methods that minimize harm to ecosystems • Adaptive management • Combination of multiple approaches on an as-needed basis

  21. MAXIMUM SUSTAINABLE YIELD

  22. PROTECTION OF FOREST RESOURCES ------ FEDERAL LAND ACQUISITION

  23. fear of “timber famine” ----- national forests/parks SECOND WAVE OF ENV POLICY

  24. types of protected lands • NATIONAL FOREST • NATIONAL PARKS • NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE • NATIONAL WILDERNESS AREAS • NATIVE AMERICAN RESERVATIONS = SOVERIGN NATIONS • FOREST SERVICE • PARK SERVICE • FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE • BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT • BIOSPHERE RESERVES/ UNESCO

  25. GROWTH VS REMOVAL LOOKS GOOD FOR U.S.

  26. GROWTH VS REMOVAL LOOKS GOOD FOR U.S. BUT STILL SECONDARY GROWTH

  27. TIMBER COMPANIES USE DIFFERENT HARVESTING METHODS

  28. NATIONAL FOREST MANAGEMENT ACT • 1976 • EVERY NATIONAL FOREST ------ PLANS FOR RENEWABLE RESOURCE MANAGEMENT • FOLLOWED BY ESA, RESTORATION PROGRAMS, LESS HARMFUL HARVESTING METHODS

  29. FOREST FIRES!

  30. FOREST FIRES • NATURAL (Lightning, static electricity) • MAN-MADE • Long-Term BENEFITS • Replacement of soil nutrients • Opportunity for pioneer species..... • Frequent, smaller fires avoid catastrophic ones.....EARTHQUAKES MANAGEMENT APPROACH! • FOREST SERVICE, HISTORICAL: TOTAL SUPPRESSION

  31. NOW....”PRESCRIBED BURNS”, “CONTROLLED BURNS”......NOT “LET IT BURN”!

  32. CLIMATE CHANGE, ACID DEPOSITION, INVASIVE SPECIES......ALTERING FORESTS

  33. TOWARDS SUSTAINABLE FORESTRY

  34. FOREST STEWARDSHIP COUNCIL (FSC) • The paper for our textbook is “chain-of-custody-certified” by the FSC: • All steps in the life cycle meet strict standards • Relying on consumer choice....like organic produce!

  35. HABITAT FRAGMENTATION

  36. ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY THEORY

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