1 / 39

Improvement in Food Resources

Improvement in Food Resources. Mr. Jeff Peterson Fulbright Teacher from Indiana, USA. Improvement in Food Resources. Irrigation Agriculture depends on water and rain. Cultivation includes ability to get water where it is needed and at the right time.

konala
Download Presentation

Improvement in Food Resources

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Improvement in Food Resources Mr. Jeff Peterson Fulbright Teacher from Indiana, USA

  2. Improvement in Food Resources • Irrigation • Agriculture depends on water and rain. • Cultivation includes ability to get water where it is needed and at the right time. • Many systems have been developed to help with this process.

  3. Improvement in Food Resources • Types of irrigation systems: • Wells • Dug Wells • Tube Wells

  4. Improvement in Food Resources • Types of irrigation systems: • Wells • Dug Wells • Tube Wells • Canals or surface irrigation

  5. Improvement in Food Resources • Types of irrigation systems: • Wells • Dug Wells • Tube Wells • Canals • River lift system

  6. Improvement in Food Resources • Types of irrigation systems: • Wells • Dug Wells • Tube Wells • Canals • River lift system • Tanks

  7. Improvement in Food Resources • Cropping Patterns • Mixed Cropping • Growing two or more crops on the same piece of land at the same time • Reduce the risk of crop failure.

  8. Improvement in Food Resources • Cropping Patterns • Inter Cropping • Growing two or more crops on the same piece of land in specific areas. • Reduce the risk of crop failure.

  9. Improvement in Food Resources • Cropping Patterns • Crop Rotation • Growing of one crop, waiting a period of time. Then planting another crop. • Reduce the risk of crop failure.

  10. Improvement in Food Resources • Crop Protection Management • Herbicides (kill weeds) • Weeds are any none crop plants growing in the field. • Compete for food, space, and light. • Reduce yield and production.

  11. Improvement in Food Resources • Crop Protection Management • Pesticides (kill insects) • Cut roots, stems, and leaf • Suck cell sap from various parts • Bore into stem and fruits

  12. Improvement in Food Resources • Crop Protection Management • Disease • Bacteria • Fungi • Viruses • Transmitted by soil, water, and air.

  13. Improvement in Food Resources • Overuse of herbicides and pesticides • Can cause environmental pollution • Development of “super bugs” • Limited biodiversity

  14. Improvement in Food Resources • Methods to control weeds. • Direct and limited use of herbicide • Mechanical removal • Timely sowing of crops • Intercropping and crop rotation

  15. Improvement in Food Resources • Storage of Grains and Crops • Biotic challenges • Insects/mites • Rodents • Fungi/bacteria • Abiotic challenges • Moisture • Temperature

  16. Improvement in Food Resources • All these factors cause: • Loss in quality • Loss in weight • Poor germinability • Discoloration • All can be controlled and prevented with good management.

  17. Improvement in Food Resources • Preventive and control measures include: • Strict cleaning of produce • Proper drying (first in sun, then in shade) • Fumigation to kill pests

  18. Improvement in Food Resources • Animal Husbandry • The scientific management of animal livestock. • Feeding • Breeding • Disease control

  19. Improvement in Food Resources • Animal based farming: • Cattle • Goat • Sheep • Poultry • Fish

  20. Improvement in Food Resources • Cattle Farming • Milk (milch animals – dairy animals) • Draught labor • Cows (Bosindicus) • Buffaloes (Bosbubalis)

  21. Improvement in Food Resources • Cattle Farming • Milk production depends on lactation period • Breeds with longer lactation periods are selected • Examples - Jersey and Brown Swiss • Local breeds better at disease resistance • Examples –Red Sindhi, Sahiwal

  22. Improvement in Food Resources • Proper shelter and cleaning is important • Humane animal care • Animal health • Better production and clean yield • Regular brushing to remove dirt/loose hair • Ventilated shelter from rain, heat, and cold • Sloped floor to help drying and cleaning

  23. Improvement in Food Resources • Food requirements for dairy animals: • Normal maintenance to live • Extra for milk production requirements • Animal feed includes: • Roughage or grass/browse • Concentrates or grain

  24. Improvement in Food Resources • Balanced rations of both. • Roughage high in fibre and micronutrients. • Concentrates are high protein and additives

  25. Improvement in Food Resources • Cattle diseases: • Death and reduction in milk production (yield) • Good management is best prevention • Parasites • External – live on skin • Internal – • Worms can live in stomach and intestine • Flukes can live in liver • Infectious diseases caused by bacteria/viruses • Vaccinations are given as prevention

  26. Improvement in Food Resources • Poultry Farming • Egg production • Meat • Cross-breeding program • Aseel + Leghorn

  27. Improvement in Food Resources • Cross-breeding program = new varieties • Desirable traits: • Number and quality of chicks • Dwarf broiler parents for commercial chicks • Summer varieties for high temp tolerance • Low maintenance requirements • Small egg laying varieties • Ability to utilize cheaper diets (unfit for humans)

  28. Improvement in Food Resources • Broiler production requirements (meat) • Fed vitamin-rich feed for fast, healthy growth • Care taken to maintain feathers and carcass • Good management is important • Good temp and ventilation • Good clean conditions • Control of disease and pests • Avoid overcrowding

  29. Improvement in Food Resources • Egg production requirements • Different then those of broilers • Daily ration (food) • Broilers = protein rich with more fat • Egg production = vitamin A and K

  30. Improvement in Food Resources • Poultry fowl can suffer from disease: • Virus • Bacteria • Fungi • Parasites • Nutritional deficiencies • Avoided with proper management = cleaning, sanitation, and use of disinfectants regularly.

  31. Improvement in Food Resources • Fish Production • Cheap source of animal protein. • Examples are true fish, prawns and molluscs. • Two ways to obtain fish • Catching fish • Farming fish – cultured fishery • Fresh water fish (lakes, ponds and streams) • Salt water fish (marine)

  32. Improvement in Food Resources • Marine Fisheries • India includes 7500km coastline • Popular marine fish • Pomphret • Mackerel • Tuna • Sardines • Bombay duck

  33. Improvement in Food Resources • Caught with nets from fishing boats • Yields increased by locating large schools • Satellites • Echo-sounders • High value fish are also farmed in seawater • Finned fish (mullets and Bhetki) • Pearl spots (mussles and oysters) • Shellfish (prawns) • Seaweed • As marine stocks are reduced, mariculture will become more important.

  34. Improvement in Food Resources • Inland Fisheries • Freshwater resources: • Canals • Ponds • Reservoirs • Rivers • Brackish water is mix of fresh and salt water • Estuaries • Lagoons

  35. Improvement in Food Resources • Fishing yield is low. • Most fish production from aquaculture. • Can be done in combination with rice crop.

  36. Improvement in Food Resources • Cultured systems have better yield • Species are selected so they do not compete for food (different food habit types) • Surface feeders = Catlas • Middle zone = Rohus • Bottom feeders = Common Carp • Weeds = Grass Carp

  37. Improvement in Food Resources • Problem is only breed during monsoon. • Lack availability of good-quality seed • Added to wild collected stock • Breed in ponds using hormone stimulation

  38. Improvement in Food Resources • Bee-Keeping • Low investment • Additional income • Honey and bee wax (medical) can be harvested • Examples • Apisceranaindica(Indian bee) • A. dorsata(rock bee) • A. florae (little bee)

  39. Improvement in Food Resources • Italian bee (A. mellifera) • High honey production • Sting less • Stay in hive for long periods • Honey value depends on pasture for nectar and pollen. • Quality flowers will effect honey taste.

More Related