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Food Resources

Food Resources. Food in the World. 30,000 plant species with parts people can eat 15 plants and 8 animals supply 90% of our food Wheat, rice, and corn are half the calories people eat 66% of people eat mainly rice, wheat, and corn (grains)

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Food Resources

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  1. Food Resources

  2. Food in the World • 30,000 plant species with parts people can eat • 15 plants and 8 animals supply 90% of our food • Wheat, rice, and corn are half the calories people eat • 66% of people eat mainly rice, wheat, and corn (grains) • The top third of the economic chain eats primarily meat. www.iia.msu.edu/absp/ drought_00.html

  3. Types of Food Production • Industrialized agriculture • Traditional agriculture www.orknet.co.uk/welsby/ farming.htm

  4. Industrialized Agriculture • Industrialized agriculture-Use large amounts of fossil fuel energy, water, commercial fertilizers and pesticides to produce huge quantities of single crops or livestock animals for sale. • www.alaskajournal.com/.../ foc_20030804021. www.alaskajournal.com/.../ foc_20030804021.

  5. Traditional Agriculture • Traditional agriculture-practiced by 2.7 people on earth • Traditonal subsistence agriculture-produce enough food to stay alive • Traditional Intensive agriculture-farmers increase inputs of human and draft labor, fertilizer and water to get a higher yield per area of cultivated land to produce enough food for families, and their income members.aol.com/ porkchopsplace/

  6. Green Revolution • Involves 3 steps • 1. Developing and planting monocultures of selectively bred or genetically engingeered high yeid varieties of key crops • 2. Lavishing fertilizer, pesticides, and water on crops to produce high yeilds • 3. Often increasing the intensity and frequency of cropping

  7. Livestock Production • Meat products are sources of quality protein. • Between 1950 and 1996, world meat production increased fourfold and per capita meat production rose by 29%. • 14% of U.S. topsoil is associated with livestock grazing. • Cattle belch out 12-15% of all the methane released into the atmosphere • Some say if Americans cut their grain intake by 16%, this would save enough grain to provide a subsistence diet for nearly 900 million people. about.reuters.com/ids/products/ onlinerep.htm

  8. Interplanting • Polyvarietal cultivation-Where plot is planted with several varieties of the same crop • Intercropping-two or more different crops grown at same time on a plot • Agroforestry- Crops and trees are planted together • Polyculture-Many different plants mature at various times, and are planted together.

  9. World Food Problems • Reasons for problems: • Population growth • Increasing affluence • Degradation and loss of cropland • Little growth in irrigation • Decline in global fertilizer • www.fi.edu/guide/hughes/ finiteresources.html

  10. Undernutrition • Undernutrition-Consuming insuffieciet food to meet one’s minimum daily energy requirement for a long enough time to cause harmful effects www.hellfirepass.com/ index_pow.htm

  11. Malnutrition • Malnutrition-Faulty nutrition. Caused by a diet that does not supply a persons with enough protein, essential fats, vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients.

  12. Overnutrition • Overnutrition-an excessive intake of food, especially fats fulton.edzone.net/winkler/ chapter05/chapter05.htm

  13. Good News! • Between 1970 and 1995, worldwide proportion of people suffering from undernutrion went from 36% to 14%. • Number of malnourished people fell from 940 million in 1970 to 850 million in 1995. • We produce more than enough food to meet the basic nutritional needs of every person on earth today

  14. Loss of Genetic diversity • There are 50,000 known edible plants documented worldwide. • Of these only 15 varieties produce 90% of the world’s food. • Modern agricultural - resulted in a serious loss of genetic variability of crops. • India’s distinctive traditional varieties of rice alone are said to have numbered between 30 and 50 thousand. • Most of these have been lost to the farmer during the last few decades as multinational seed companies push a few commercial types

  15. In future • If plant genetic losses worldwide are not slowed down, some estimates show that as many as 60,000 plant species, which accounts for 25% of the world’s total, will be lost by the year 2025. • The most economical way to prevent this is by expanding the network and coverage of our Protected Areas. • Collections in germplasm, seed banks and tissue culture facilities, are other possible ways to prevent extinction but are extremely expensive.

  16. Environmental Effects of Producing Food • Agriculture has a greater harmful impact on air, soil, water, and biodiversity resources than any other human activity. ptcl.chem.ox.ac.uk/MSDS/HY/ hydrochloric_acid.html

  17. Increasing Crop Yields • Agricultraul experts expect most future increases in food yields per hectare on existing cropland to result from improved strains of plants and from expansion of green revolution technology

  18. Food Growth in Urban Areas • Urban gardens provide 15% of world’s food. • If people grew more food in their backyards, they could live more sustainable and save money.

  19. Fishing • 3rd major food producing system consists of fisheries • 99% of fish caught in ocean is from the coastal waters • Between 1950 and 1996, fish catch increased 4.9 fold www.starfish.govt.nz/social/ facts/fact-letsgo.htm

  20. Problems With Fishing • Overfishing-Taking of so many fish that too little breeding stock is left to maintain numbers • Commercial extinction-reduction of a species to the point at which it’s no longer profitable to hunt for them

  21. Aquaculture • Aquaculture-where fish and shellfish are raised for food • Supplies 20% of world’s commercial food harvest • Increased 3.3 fold between 1984 and 1996 www.un.org/.../portuguese/ 2003/aug/030811.html

  22. Gov. assistance to farmers and consumers • Keep food prices low • Give farmers subsidies to keep them in business and to encourage them to increase food production • Eliminate most or all price controls and subsidies • Continue Agricultural research

  23. Sustainable Agricultural • Sustainable Agricultural-Method of growing crops and raising livestock based on organic fertilizers, soil conservation, water conservation, biological control of pests, and minimal use of nonrenewable fossil fuel energy www.sare.org/htdocs/ sare/about.html

  24. Alternate food sources • Food can be innovatively produced if we break out of the current agricultural patterns. • This includes working on new avenues to produce food, such as using forests for their multiple non-wood forest products, which can be used for food if harvested sustainably. • This includes fruit, mushrooms, sap, gum, etc. This takes time, as people must develop a taste for these new foods

  25. Case study • Israel began using drip irrigation systems as it is short of water. With this technique, farmers have been able to improve the efficiency of irrigation by 95%. • Over a 20-year period, Israel’s food production doubled without an increase in the use of water for agriculture.

  26. In India • Some traditional communities in urban and semi urban towns used to grow their own vegetables in backyards on wastewater from their own homes. • Calcutta releases its waste water into surrounding lagoons in which fish are reared and the water is used for growing vegetables.

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