Chapter 11 – Reading Questions
- Why have farmer Joel Salatin’s farming practices attracted attention from across the nation?
- What principles does Salatin follow when running his farm?
- What is the significance of farms producing foods they way that Salatin’s does?
- What has been the recent trend in world hunger in recent decades?
- How much food does the average adult require, and what are the effects of undernutrition?
- What is the distinction between undernutrition and malnourishment?
- What is overnutrition, and what are its effects on individuals and societies?
- Which type of food dominates human energy intake, accounting for 60% of our raw calories?
- Even though the world produces enough food to feed every human, why do undernutrition and malnutrition persist?
- Experts disagree on why worldwide per capita grain production has flattened off. What factors may be to blame?
- What impact did the invention of agriculture have on human population growth?
- What major changes took place in farming practices during the 20th century?
- How can we calculate the energy subsidy of a food?
- Using Figure 11.4 on p.287, what types of agricultural practices require the greatest energy subsidies? What types of activities require the least energy subsidy?
- What role do fossil fuels play in modern agriculture?
- What changes did the Green Revolution bring, and what were its positive and negative effects?
- Complete the chart below with information about modern agricultural practices
Role in Modern Agriculture? / Benefits? / Drawbacks?
Mechanization
Irrigation
Fertilizers
Monocropping
Pesticides
- Why has production shifted from small-scale farms to large-scale farms in modern agriculture?
- How do salinization and waterlogging of soil occur?
- How is modern genetic engineering of foods different from the artificial selection humans have been performing on crops and animals for thousands of years?
- Complete the following chart with information about benefits and drawbacks of GMO foods:
Benefits of Genetically Modified foods / Drawbacks/risks of Genetically Modified foods
1. / 1.
2. / 2.
3. / 3.
4. / 4.
- Why is small-scale farming still common in many developing countries, despite the advantages the Green Revolution brought to large-scale farms?
- Where is shifting agriculture most likely to be practiced, and what techniques characterize it?
- What happens during desertification, what causes it and where is it most likely to occur?
- What are the goals of sustainable agriculture?
- Complete the following chart with information about common sustainable agricultural practices:
What is it? Define/Explain / How can it be used to improve sustainability? What problems does it attempt to solve?
Intercropping
Crop Rotation
Agroforestry
Countour Plowing
No-Till Ariculture
Integrated Pest Mgmt
Organic Agriculture
- Why has high-density animal farming in CAFOs become a major way in which meat is raised?
- What practices at CAFOs can have negative environmental impacts?
- What are the advantages and disadvantages of free-range meat (as opposed to CAFO meat?)
- What are fisheries, and why are they particularly difficult to protect from the effects of the tragedy of the commons?
- What factors have driven many fisheries in to decline or collapse?
- Which commercial fishing practices have the largest negative environmental impacts?
- What types of policies and practices can make commercial fishing more sustainable?
- What is aquaculture, and to what extent is it a sustainable solution to world demand for fish?
- (Working Towards Sustainability) What would be the advantage of switching to perennial crops?
Chapter 11 Vocabulary List
Undernutrition / The condition in which not enough calories are ingested to maintain health.Malnutrition / Having a diet that lacks the correct balance of proteins, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals.
Food security / A condition in which people have access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs for an active and healthy life.
Famine / The condition in which food insecurity is so extreme that large numbers of deaths occur in a given area over a relatively short period.
Anemia / A deficiency of iron.
Overnutrition / Ingestion of too many calories and improper foods.
Industrial agriculture / Agriculture that applies the techniques of mechanization and standardization.
Energy subsidy / The energy input per calorie of food produced.
Green revolution / A shift in agricultural practices in the twentieth century that included new management techniques, mechanization, fertilization, irrigation, and improved crop varieties, and resulted in increased food output.
Mechanization
Irrigation
Waterlogging / A form of soil degradation that occurs when soil remains under water for prolonged periods.
Soil salinization / A form of soil degradation that occurs when the small amount of salts in irrigation water becomes highly concentrated on the soil surface through evaporation.
Synthetic fertilizer / Fertilizer produced commercially, normally with the use of fossil fuels.
Monocropping / An agricultural method that utilizes large plantings of a single species or variety.
Pesticide persistence / The length of time a chemical remains in the environment.
Bioaccumulation / An increased concentration of a chemical within an organism over time.
Pesticide treadmill / A cycle of pesticide development, followed by pest resistance, followed by new pesticide development
Conventional agriculture / Agriculture that applies the techniques of mechanization and standardization.
Slash-and-burn agriculture
Desertification / The transformation of arable, productive land to desert or unproductive land due to climate change or destructive land use.
Sustainable agriculture / Agriculture that fulfills the need for food and fiber while enhancing the quality of the soil, minimizing the use of nonrenewable resources, and allowing economic viability for the farmer.
Intercropping / An agricultural method in which two or more crop species are planted in the same field at the same time to promote a synergistic interaction.
Crop rotation / An agricultural technique in which crop species in a field are alternated from season to season.
Agroforestry / An agricultural technique in which trees and vegetables are intercropped
Contour plowing / An agricultural technique in which plowing and harvesting are done parallel to the topographic contours of the land.
No-till agriculture / An agricultural method in which farmers do not turn the soil between seasons, used as a means of reducing erosion.
Integrated Pest management / An agricultural practice that uses a variety of techniques designed to minimize pesticide inputs.
Organic agriculture / Production of crops with the goal of improving the soil each year without the use of synthetic pesticides or fertilizers.
CAFO / A large indoor or outdoor structure used to raise animals at very high densities.
Free-range meat
Fishery / A commercially harvestable population of fish within a particular ecological region.
Bycatch / The unintentional catch of nontarget species while fishing.
Individual Transferable Quotas / A fishery management program in which individual fishers are given a total allowable catch of fish in a season that they can either catch or sell.
Aquaculture / Farming aquatic organisms such as fish, shellfish, and seaweeds.
Fishery collapse / The decline of a fish population by 90 percent or more.