Farming, ploughing rice paddy, in [[Indonesia]]
Agriculture is the process of producing
food,
feed,
fiber and other desired products by the cultivation of certain
plants and the raising of domesticated
animals (
livestock). The practice of agriculture is also known as
farming, while scientists, inventors and others devoted to improving farming methods and implements are also said to be engaged in agriculture.
More
people in the
world are involved in agriculture as their primary
economic activity than in any other, yet it only accounts for four percent of the world's
GDP.
Overview
[[Tea plantation in
Java,
Indonesia]]
Agriculture can refer to
subsistence agriculture, the production of enough
food to meet just the needs of the farmer/agriculturalist and his/her family.
It may also refer to
industrial agriculture, (often refered to as
factory farming) long prevalent in "developed" nations and increasingly so elsewhere, which consists of obtaining financial income from the cultivation of land to yield
produce, the commercial raising of animals (
animal husbandry), or both.
Agriculture is also short for the
study of the practice of agriculture—more formally known as
agricultural science.
Increasingly, in addition to food for humans and
animal feeds, agriculture produces goods such as cut flowers, ornamental and
nursery plants,
timber or lumber,
fertilizers, animal hides,
leather, industrial chemicals (
starch,
sugar,
ethanol,
alcohols and
plastics),
fibers (
cotton,
wool,
hemp, and
flax), fuels (
methane from
biomass,
biodiesel) and both legal and illegal drugs (
biopharmaceuticals,
tobacco, marijuana,
opium,
cocaine).
Genetically engineered plants and animals produce specialty drugs.
In the
Western world, the use of gene manipulation, better management of soil nutrients, and improved
weed control have greatly increased yields per unit area. At the same time, the use of mechanization has decreased labor requirements. The developing world generally produce lower yields, having less of the latest science,
capital, and technology base.
Modern agriculture depends heavily on engineering and technology and on the biological and physical sciences.
Irrigation,
drainage,
conservation and sanitary engineering, each of which is important in successful farming, are some of the fields requiring the specialized knowledge of agricultural engineers.
Agricultural chemistry deals with other vital farming concerns, such as the application of fertilizer, insecticides (see
Pest control), and fungicides, soil makeup, analysis of agricultural products, and nutritional needs of farm animals.
Plant breeding and genetics contribute immeasurably to farm productivity. Genetics has also made a science of livestock breeding.
Hydroponics, a method of soilless gardening in which plants are grown in chemical nutrient solutions, may help meet the need for greater food production as the world's population increases.
The packing, processing, and marketing of agricultural products are closely related activities also influenced by science. Methods of quick-freezing and dehydration have increased the markets for farm products (see
Food preservation;
Meat packing industry).
Mechanization, the outstanding characteristic of late 19th- and 20th-century agriculture, has eased much of the backbreaking toil of the farmer. More significantly, mechanization has enormously increased farm efficiency and productivity (see
Agricultural machinery). Animals, including horses, mules, oxen, camels, llamas, alpacas, and dogs; however, are still used to cultivate fields, harvest crops and transport farm products to markets in many parts of the world.
Airplanes, helicopters, trucks and tractors are used in agriculture for seeding, spraying operations for insect and disease control, transporting perishable products, and fighting forest fires. Radio and television disseminate vital weather reports and other information such as market reports that concern farmers. Computers have become an essential tool for farm management.
A [[tractor
ploughing an
alfalfa field]]
According to the
National Academy of Engineering in the US, agricultural mechanization is one of the 20 greatest engineering achievements of the 20th century. In the early
1900s, it took one American farmer to produce food for 2.5 people, where today, due to engineering technology (also,
plant breeding and
agrichemicals), a single farmer can feed over 130 people
http://www.greatachievements.org/greatachievements/ga_7_2.html. This comes at a cost, however, of large amounts of energy input, from unsustainable, mostly
fossil fuel, sources.
Animal husbandry means breeding and raising animals for meat or to harvest animal products (like milk, eggs, or wool) on a continual basis.
In recent years some aspects of industrial intensive agriculture have been the subject of increasing discussion. The widening
sphere of influence held by large seed and chemical companies, meat packers and food processors has been a source of concern both within the farming community and for the general public. There has been increased activity of some people against some farming practices, raising chickens for food being one example. Another issue is the type of feed-stock given to some animals that can cause
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy in cattle.
The patent protection given to companies that develop new types of
seed using
genetic engineering has allowed seed to be licensed to farmers in much the same way that computer software is licensed to users. This has changed the balance of power in favor of the seed companies, allowing them to dictate terms and conditions previously unheard of. Some argue these companies are guilty of
biopiracy.
Soil conservation and
nutrient management have been important concerns since the
1950s, with the best farmers taking a
stewardship role with the land they operate. However, increasing contamination of waterways and wetlands by nutrients like
nitrogen and
phosphorus are of concern in many countries.
Increasing consumer awareness of agricultural issues has led to the rise of
community-supported agriculture, local food movement,
slow food, and commercial
organic farming, though these yet remain fledgling industries.
History
Archaeobotanists have traced the selection and cultivation of specific food plant characteristics, such as a semi-tough
rachis and larger seeds, to just after the
Younger Dryas (about 9,500 BC) in the early
Holocene in the
Levant region of the
Fertile Crescent. Limited
anthropological and
archaeological evidence both indicate a
grain-
grinding culture farming along the
Nile in the
10th millennium BC using the world's earliest known type of
sickle blades. There is even earlier evidence for conscious cultivation and seasonal harvest: grains of
rye with domestic traits have been recovered from Epi-Palaeolithic (10,000+ BC) contexts at Abu Hureyra in
Syria, but this appears to be a localised phenomenon resulting from cultivation of stands of wild rye, rather than a definitive step towards domestication. It is not until ca. 8,500 BC, in middle-Eastern cultures referred to as
Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (
PPNB), where there is the first definite evidence for the emergence of a widespread subsistence economy that was dependent on domesticated plants and animals. In these contexts lie the origins of the eight so-called
founder crops of agriculture: firstly
emmer wheat,
einkorn wheat, then hulled
barley,
pea,
lentil, bitter vetch, chick pea and
flax. These eight crops occur more or less simultaneously on
PPNB sites in this region, although the consensus is that wheat (naturally mutated grass) was the first to be sown and harvested on a significant scale. There are many sites that date to between ca. 8,500 BC and 7,500 BC where the systematic farming of these crops contributed the major part of the inhabitants' diet. From the
Fertile Crescent agriculture spread eastwards to
Central Asia and westwards into
Cyprus,
Anatolia and, by 7,000 BC,
Greece. Farming, principally of emmer and einkorn, reached northwestern
Europe via southeastern and central Europe by ca. 4,800 BC (see, among others, Price, D. [ed.] 2000.
Europe's First Farmers. Cambrige Universty Press; Harris, D. [ed.] 1996
The Origins and Spread of Agriculture in Eurasia. UCL Press).
The reasons for the earliest introduction of farming may have included
climate change, but possibly there were also social reasons (e.g. accumulation of food surplus for competitive gift-giving). Most certainly there was a gradual transition from
hunter-gatherer to agricultural economies after a lengthy period when some crops were deliberately planted and other foods were gathered from the wild. Although localised climate change is the favoured explanation for the origins of agriculture in the
Levant, the fact that farming was
invented at least three times, possibly more, suggests that social reasons may have been instrumental. In addition to emergence of farming in the
Fertile Crescent, agriculture appeared by at least 6,800 BC in East Asia (
rice) and, later, in
Central and
South America (
maize,
squash). Small scale agriculture also likely arose independently in early Neolithic contexts in
India (rice) and
Southeast Asia (taro).
Ancient Egyptian farmer
Full dependency on domestic crops and animals (i.e. when wild resources contributed a nutritionally insignificant component to the diet) was not until the
Bronze Age. If the operative definition of
agriculture includes large scale intensive cultivation of land,
mono-cropping, organised
irrigation, and use of a specialized
labour force, the title "inventors of agriculture" would fall to the
Sumerians, starting ca. 5,500 BC. Intensive farming allows a much greater density of population than can be supported by hunting and gathering and allows for the accumulation of excess product to keep for winter use or to sell for profit. The ability of farmers to feed large numbers of people whose activities have nothing to do with material production was the crucial factor in the rise of standing armies. The agriculturalism of the Sumerians allowed them to embark on an unprecedented territorial expansion, making them the first
empire builders. Not long after, the Egyptians, powered by effective farming of the
Nile valley, achieved a population density from which enough warriors could be drawn for a territorial expansion more than tripling the Sumerian empire in area.
The invention of a three field system of crop rotation during in the
Middle Ages vastly improved agricultural efficiency.
After 1492 the world's agricultural patterns were shuffled in the widespread exchange of plants and animals known as the
Columbian Exchange. Crops and animals that were previously only known in the Old World were now transplanted to the New and vice versa. Perhaps most notably, the
tomato became a favorite in European cuisine, while certain wheat strains quickly took to western hemisphere soils and became a dietary staple even for native North, Central and South Americans.
By the early 1800s agricultural practices, particularly careful selection of hardy strains and cultivars, had so improved that yield per land unit was many times that seen in the Middle Ages and before, especially in the largely virgin lands of North and South America. With the rapid rise of
mechanization in the 20th century, especially in the form of the
tractor, the demanding tasks of
sowing, harvesting and
threshing could be performed with a speed and on a scale barely imaginable before. These advances have led to efficiencies enabling certain modern farms in the United States, Argentina, Israel, Germany and a few other nations to output volumes of high quality produce per land unit at what may be the practical limit.
Crops
World production of major crops in 2004
In millions of metric tons, based on FAO estimates
http://faostat.fao.org/faostat/form?collection=Production.Crops.Primary&Domain=Production&servlet=1&hasbulk=0&version=ext&language=EN:
:
Maize 705
:
Wheat 624
:
Rice 608
:
Soybeans 206
However, grazing grass and animal feed-crop production must exceed the total of these crops.
Crop improvement
An agricultural scientist records corn growth
Netting protecting wine grapes from birds
Domestication of plants is done in order to increase yield, improve disease resistance and drought tolerance, ease harvest and to improve the taste and
nutritional value and many other characteristics. Centuries of careful selection and breeding have had enormous effects on the characteristics of crop plants. Plant breeders use greenhouses and other techniques to get as many as three generations of plants per year so that they can make improvements all the more quickly.
Plant selection and breeding in the 1920s and '30s improved
pasture (grasses and clover) in New Zealand. Extensive radiation mutagenesis efforts (i.e. primitive genetic engineering) during the
1950s produced the modern commercial varieties of grains such as wheat, corn and barley.
For example, average yields of corn (
maize) in the USA have increased from around 2.5 tons per hectare (40 bushels per acre) in 1900 to about 9.4 t/ha (150 bushels per acre) in 2001, primarily due to improvements in genetics. Similarly, worldwide average wheat yields have increased from less than 1 t/ha in 1900 to more than 2.5 t/ha in 1990.
South American average wheat yields are around 2 t/ha,
African under 1 t/ha,
Egypt and Arabia up to 3.5 to 4 t/ha with irrigation. In contrast, the average wheat yield in countries such as
France is over 8 t/ha. Higher yields are due to improvements in genetics, as well as use of intensive farming techniques (use of fertilizers, chemical
pest control, growth control to avoid lodging).
[Conversion note: 1 bushel of wheat = 60 pounds (lb) ≈ 27.215 kg. 1 bushel of corn = 56 pounds ≈ 25.401 kg]
Very recently,
genetic engineering has begun to be employed in some parts of the world to speed up the selection and breeding process. The most widely used modification is a herbicide resistance gene that allows plants to tolerate exposure to glyphosate, which is used to control weeds in the crop. A less frequently used but more controversial modification causes the plant to produce a toxin to reduce damage from insects (c.f. Starlink).
There are specialty producers who raise less common types of livestock or plants.
Aquaculture, the farming of
fish,
shrimp, and
algae, is closely associated with agriculture.
Apiculture, the culture of bees, traditionally for
honey—increasingly for crop
pollination.
See also :
botany,
List of domesticated plants,
List of vegetables, List of herbs, List of fruit
Environmental problems
Policy
Agricultural policy focuses on the goals and methods of agricultural production. At the policy level, common goals of agriculture include:
- Food safety: Ensuring that the food supply is free of contamination.
- Food security: Ensuring that the food supply meets the population's needs.
- Food quality: Ensuring that the food supply is of a consistent and known quality.
- Conservation
- Environmental impact
- Economic stability
Methods
References
- Wells, Spencer: The Journey of Man : A Genetic Odyssey. Princeton University Press, 2003. ISBN: 069111532X
- Crosby, Alfred W.: The Columbian Exchange : Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492. Praeger Publishers, 2003 (30th Anniversary Edition). ISBN: 0275980731
- Collinson, M. (editor): A History of Farming Systems Research. CABI Publishing, 2000. ISBN: 0851994059
See also
External links
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