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55 Terms
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Animal Husbandry
An agricultural activity associated with the raising of domesticated animals, such as cattle, horses, sheep, and goats.
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Cash Cropping
Planting large amounts of profitable crops for mass production and sell.
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Corporate Agriculture (Agribusiness)
System of food production involving everything from the development of the seeds to the marketing and sale of food products at the market.
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Commercial Crops
A crop grown for direct sale rather than for livestock feed.
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Domestication of Plants
Domesticating plants for human use, one of the first steps to a full fledged agricultural economy.
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Double Cropping
Planting and harvesting a crop on a field more than once a year.
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Fallow
When farmers grow crops in a clear field for only a few years until the soil nutrients are depleted. The farmers then have the soil empty for a few years so the nutrients in the soil can be restored; uncropped land.
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GMOs
Foods that are mostly products or organisms that have their genes altered in a laboratory for specific purposes, such as disease resistant, increased productivity, or nutrients value; Genetically Modified Organisms.
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Intensive Farming
Subsistence agriculture in which farmers must expend a relative large amount of effort to produce the maximum feasible yield from a pared of land.
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Labor-intensive Crops
Includes fruits, garden vegetables, herbs, and anything requiring constant tending or wielding.
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Labor-intensive Animals
Animals that require constant tending, includes dairy cow and poultry for eggs.
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Monoculture
Dependence on a single agricultural commodity.
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Mechanization
In agriculture, the replacement of human labor with technology or machines.
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Market Gardens
Small scale production of fruits, vegetables, and flowers as cash crops sold directly to local consumers, Distinguishable by the large diversity of crops grown on a small area of land, during a single growing season. Labor is done manually.
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Plantation Agriculture
Raising a large amount of a 'cash crop' for local sale or export.
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Suitcase Farmers
A suitcase farm is a farm in which no one reside permanently, they go against the grain of traditional farming. In the US migrant workers provide a cheap, abundant labor source; they work on the farm during the day and leave at night. There is no residence on the site.
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Sustainable Yield
Rate of crop production that can be maintained over time.
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Transhumance
Movement of animal herd to cooler highland areas in the summer to warmer lowland areas in the winter.
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Von Thunen Model
Theory that a commercial farmer wull decide which crops to grow and which livestock to raise depending on the proximity to market.
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Green Revolution
An outgrowth of the 3rd agricultural revolution, this effort began in the 1940s and developed new strains of hybrid seeds and fertilizers that dramatically increased the crop output possible from each farm.
Nomadic herders to sedentary lifestyle and intentional farming
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1st Agric Revo Impact
Birth of civilization Birth of urban areas Birth of government Birth of class structures(social stratified) Before this egalitarian Created irrigation Created farmers,slaves, government officials, merchants Surplus of food Led to writing Began trading which led to system of defense Towns located on high ground(acropolis) and water
new strains with higher yields through genetic manipulation to increase yield through the use of herbicides and fertilizers
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How to increase GMOs
1. Purchase artificial fertilizer Chemicals 2. Irrigation system 3. Purchase herbicides/pesticides 4. Purchase machines to keep up with production 5. Need a receptive environment 6. Need receptive commodity markets 7. Barriers to implementation Poor, unreceptive environment river water
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Shifting Cultivation Location
Subtropics and Tropics
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Shifting Cultivation Steps and Characteristics
Steps: Clear land Plant land Fallow(not planting anything so soil can replenish itself) Come back to land when it is full of nutrients
Characteristics: Low quality land Low population density
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Nomadism
Dry Areas Same climate as livestock ranching(commercial farms in MDCs) Marginalized land
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Commercial Farming Positives
Increase yield Keeps food costs low
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Commercial Farming Negatives
Use of chemicals Human health Younger age of puberty Cancer increase Environment Rainforest destruction Desertification Rise in sustainably sourced farming Local and organic Blue zone where business collaborate to show thi
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Livestock Ranching
Raising of domesticated animals for food or items like leather Climate: Dry Growing industry As countries develop, meat eating increases Standard of living increases Not near market Bulk-reducing industry
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Dairying
Climate: Cold/Warm Mid Latitudes Perishable Area surrounding dairying is milk shed Closer to market North Latitude Bulk-gaining Bottling fluid
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Mixed livestock and grain
Raise domesticated animals and growing feed
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Commercial Grain Farming
Wheat belt Bread-basket US Corn belt
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Market Gardening
Items people garden Near market since items are perishable Suitcase farms Rely on migrant labor
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Mediterranean
Dry summers High rainfall needed France, Spain, Greece, North Africa, Australia, Chile, California Produce grapes, citrus, etc. Wine production
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Plantation farming
Tropics In LDCs Owned by MDCs Cash crops
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Cash Crop Examples
Worldwide Cotton Rubber Amazon Rice India Sugar from Caribbean
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Coffee
Ethiopian Origin US \#1 consumer Central America and Africa produce it
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Illegal Drugs
Marijuana, Poppy seeds Core are demanders Periphery grows them Takes processing
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What two factors influenced Von Thunen model?
Perishability and Transport Costs
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Von Thunen ring outside city(1)
Market gardening/dairying/feedlot Feedlots fatten livestock before slaughter Skinny before sent near market
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Von Thunen ring (2)
Forestry
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Von Thunen ring (3)
Food grains and cash crops (Crop Rotation)
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Von Thunen ring (4)
Enclosed Field
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Von Thunen assumptions
Flat terrain\---Similar climate/soil\---no barriers to transportation
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Von Thunen factors that decrease the model
Refrigeration Food preservation Global markets/corporate decision making New alternatives for fuel New ways grains are used
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Vertical farming
Urban, crowded, squatter areas Takes up less space
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Subsistence crop
Food crops used only by family or local market trading
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Organic Farming
o extracts farmers from big corporations o environmental\=reduce synthetic chemicals in soil/water farming and ranching without the use of herbicides, pesticides, growth hormones, and other synthetic inputs. o sold in 54% of US grocery store
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Truck Farms
Farm where farmers produce fruits for the market Use mechanization to produce large quantities of fruits and veggies