Chapter 13 Sustainable Agriculture
Chapter 13 Sustainable Agriculture
An introduction……
Sustainable Agriculture
• The practice of farming using principles of ecology, the
study of relationships between organisms and their
environment.
– It has been defined as "an integrated system of plant and animal
production practices having a site-specific application that will
last over the long term:
• Environmental health
• Economic profitability
• Environmentally Sustainable
Agriculture should be:
– Bearable
– Equitable
– viable for the farmer
• If successful
– Equity will be recognized by
the farmer as beneficial for
this commitment to quality
food output.
• Processing
• Packaging
• Refrigeration
• transport of food
• Remember:
• Via photosynthesis, over 100 billion
metric tons of CO2 and H2O are
converted into cellulose and other
plant products
Many studies have drawn similar
conclusions.
• India
– organic farming research shows increases in carbon
absorption by up to 55 percent (even higher when
agro-forestry is added into the mix), and water holding
capacity is increased by 10 percent.
• California
– study of 20 commercial farms found that organic fields
had 28 percent more carbon in the soil than industrial
farms.
Water
• In some areas, sufficient
rainfall is available for crop
growth, but many other
areas require irrigation.
• Water withdrawal.
– When expressed in percentage of water resources, it shows the
degree of pressure on water resources.
• Animals:
– micro-organisms mix soils as they
form burrows and pores, allowing
moisture and gases to move about.
In the same way, plant roots open
channels in soils.
• Plants:
– deep taproots can penetrate many
meters through the different soil
layers to bring up nutrients from
deeper in the profile.
– fibrous roots that spread out near
the soil surface have roots that are
easily decomposed, adding organic
matter.
The Soil
• Micro-organisms:
– including fungi and bacteria, effect
chemical exchanges between roots
and soil and act as a reserve of
nutrients.
• Humans:
– impact soil formation by removing
vegetation cover with erosion as the
result.
– Also mix the different soil layers,
restarting the soil formation
process as less weathered material
is mixed with the more developed
upper layers.
Soil Erosion
• Fast becoming one of the worlds greatest problems. It is
estimated that more than a thousand million tonnes of
southern Africa's soil are eroded every year.
– Experts predict that crop yields will be halved within thirty to
fifty years if erosion continues at present rates.
• Crop rotation
– used to suppress weeds,
pathogens and insect pests.
Good crop management techniques
• Cover crops
– stabilizing effects by holding soil
and nutrients in place
• Low environmental
impact transport
system
Copper
nutrients required for plant 0.1 2.2
Iron
growth and development. 0.5 27.4
Potassium
• Cheap, natural, and fantastic
35.6 552.1