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Published byPeter Norris Modified over 9 years ago
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Introduction to Agriculture
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Definition of: the science or practice of farming, including cultivation of the soil for the growing of crops and the rearing of animals to provide food, wool, and other products
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Includes: Agronomy Horticulture Forestry Animal Husbandry/Science
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Agronomy Using plants to produce food (animal and human consumption), fiber, and fuel Soil science closely related
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Horticulture Landscape design and construction Landscape maintenance Nursery and Greenhouse production
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Forestry creating, managing, using, conserving, and repairing forests and associated resources to meet desired needs, and values for human benefitforests Practiced in both plantations and natural stands
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Animal Sciences Cattle ▫Beef/Dairy Poultry ▫Egg laying / Meat Equine ▫Livestock? Swine ▫Meat Sheep/Goats ▫Meat / Fiber
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Agricultural Statistics World-Wide 126 billion acres 15.77 billion acres are habitable Only 3-4% of that is farmable
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Agricultural Statistics United States 360,892,200 acres of cropland Principal operators 34 and younger: ▫2002 123,059 ▫2007 118,613 ▫2014 119,833 Principal operators 65 and older: ▫2002 557,830 ▫2007 655,654 ▫2014 701,276
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Vocabulary Domestication: hereditary reorganization of wild animals and plants into domestic and cultivated forms according to the interests of people (generally need human intervention to survive)hereditaryplants Selective Breeding (artificial selection):humans selectively develop particular phenotypic traits (characteristics) by choosing which animal or plant reproduce together
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Vocabulary Hybrid: mixing, through sexual reproduction, of two animals or plants of different breeds, varieties, species (can create animals with more useful characteristics than parents) ▫https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHBI7ggw53o Organic Farming: farming that does not use commercial farming chemicals Monoculture: the cultivation of a single crop in a given area, can be susceptible to disease and crop loss Polyculture: the cultivation of a multiple crops in a given area, can be better able to survive disease and crop loss
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Vocabulary Ranching: practice of raising grazing livestock Commercial Farming: farming for a profit, where food is produced by advanced technological means for sale
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Vocabulary Breed: specific group of domestic animals having the same appearance, behavior, and/or other characteristics that distinguish it from other organisms of the same species and that were arrived at through selective breeding Species: organisms that reproduce and to create fertile offspring
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Thomas Malthus Essay on populations in 1798 Population growth will surpass resources Population will eventually crash unless it reached “checks” to growth
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Thomas Malthus Population has continued to grow Have we surpassed his predictions? WHY? Have we completely escaped his predictions? What are the 3 agricultural revolutions?
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