Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBeverly Taylor Modified over 9 years ago
1
Chapter 19 Food Resources: A Challenge for Agriculture
2
Organic Food Production Act Defines organic food as those crops grown in soil that has been free of commercial inorganic fertilizers & pesticides for at least 3 years.
3
Food Composed of: Carbohydrates- sugars & starches What do we use them for? Proteins- large complex molecules composed of amino acids What do we use them for? 1. 2. __ different amino acids, the body makes __, __ come from food
4
Food Composed of: Lipids- includes fats & oils What do we use them for? Energy production - Minerals- inorganic elements such as zinc & iron What do we need them for?
5
Food Composed of: Vitamins- complex molecules required in small amounts What do we need them for Water
6
Food Insecurity 2 regions in world w/ greatest food insecurity = Low income = food deficits countries Problem is not producing enough food but distribution & intermittent problems such as famine 1.Undernourished- 2.Mal-nourished- 3.Overnourished- 4. Famine-
7
2 Diseases of Malnutrition: 1.Marasmus- 2.Kwashiorkor-
8
Problems with Over nutrition 1.
9
World Grain Carryover Stocks Amount of grains remaining from previous harvests at the start of a new harvest (i.e. what’s already socked away) Food Security- Minimum recommended stockpile = __days
10
2 Reasons Grain Stockpiles are Falling 1.2. Animal products account for __% of calories consumed by people in developed countriesAnimal products account for __% of calories consumed by people in developed countries _% in developing countries
11
Economic Effects What is the main cause for malnutrition & under nutrition Economy effects food due to _______________________________ Cultural acceptance- what’s food to one is not food to another (e.g. pork for Jews & beef for Hindu’s) ____ plants provide ~ 90% of food consumed ____ of all cereal grains grown in highly developed countries are used to feed livestock
12
Types of diets Omnivores Vegetarians Lactoovo vegetarians (milk, eggs & foods from milk, eggs are ok) Lacto-vegetarians (milk & milk products are ok) Vegans- no milk, eggs or their products)
13
Types of Agriculture 1. High-input agriculture - 2. Subsistence agriculture
14
Types of Agriculture 3. Shifting agriculture (slash & burn) 4. Nomadic herding 5. Polyculture-
15
Vocabulary Domestication- Problem? Germplasm-
16
Green Revolution Production of more food per acre of cropland using modern cultivation methods & new high-yielding varieties Problems w/ it include 1. 2. 3. 4.
17
Eating Vegetarian If every American ate vegetarian for one day, we would save: 100 billion gallons of water 1.5 billion pounds of grain 70 million gallons of gas 33 tons of antibiotics 1.2 million tons of carbon dioxide 4.5 million tons of animal feces Like taking 500,000 cars off the road.
18
Food Processing 1.Manual alteration via drying, canning, freezing, irradiation, curing & refrigeration 2.Food additives to enhance taste & color or texture, improve nutrition, reduce spoilage &/or extend self life
19
Food Additives Sugar & salt are the 2 most common food additives Common preservatives- sodium propionate & potassium sorbate Other food additives- anti oxidants, nitrates/nitrites Food & Drug Administration- responsible for monitoring food additives
20
Environmental Impacts of Agriculture Agricultural practices are single largest cause of surface water pollution in the U.S. Heavy use of energy Pest-resistance to pesticides
21
Degradation Degradation- natural or human induced process that decreases the ability of the land to support crops or livestock Solution: Sustainable agriculture (alternative or low-input agriculture) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
22
Genetic Engineering Ability to take a specific gene from a cell of one kind of organism & place it in the cell of an unrelated organism GMO- genetically-modified organisms Concerns: 1. 2.
23
Fish/Aqua Culture Fish/Seafood popular cause they are a source of high-quality protein (~5% of human diet from seafood) 4 main categories 1. 2. 3. 4.
24
Problems with Fisheries 1.Increase pressure from growing human population & increase of seafood diets 2.Sophisticated fishing equipment leads to over fishing (ex. long-lines, purse- seine nets, trawl bag, drift nets) 3.“By catch” often dies & is simply dumped back
25
Ocean Enclosure National boundaries in ocean (200 miles off shore) over which the nation controls the fishing Open management- unrestricted access to fishing grounds
26
Fishery Conservation Acts Magnuson Fishery Conservation Act Regulates U.S. fishing Establishes 8 regional fishery management councils Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation & Management Act Requires regional councils & National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) to provide “essential fish habitat” for more than 600 species, reduce over fishing, minimum by catch & rebuilt populations
27
Means for regulating fisheries Quotas Restrictions on certain types of fishing gear Limits on # of fishing boats Closure of fisheries during spawning periods 60-80% of all “important” fish live at least part of their lives in coastal areas
28
Aquaculture Aquaculture- rearing aquatic organism Mariculture- cultivation of marine organisms (alternative name for aquaculture) Expensive Lots of pollution Potential for release of invasive/exotic species
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.