Chapter 5: Land and Water Use (copy) Revised

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63 Terms

1
The Tragedy of the Commons
The essay parallels what is happening worldwide in regards to resource depletion and pollution.
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2
The primary cause of gas emissions from CAFOs is the **___________** being stored in large quantities.
decomposition of animal manure
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3
CAFOs release several types of gas emissions—**__________.**
ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, methane, and particulate matter
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4
IPAT Formula
I = P × A × T
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5
________ release several types of gas emissions- ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, methane, and particulate matter.
CAFOs
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6
Tree canopies
It provide the ground below with shade and maintain a cooler and moister environment below
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7
Inorganic Fertilizers
A fertilizer mined from mineral deposits or manufactured from synthetic compounds
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8
Organic Fertilizers
Any Any fertilizer that originates from an organic source, such as bone meal, compost, fish extracts, manure, or seaweed
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9
Genetic engineering techniques
These allow for the introduction of new traits as well as greater control over traits when compared to previous methods
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10
Rangelands
These are native grasslands, woodlands, wetlands, and deserts that are grazed by domestic livestock or wild animals
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11
Slash-and-Burn Agriculture
It is a widely used method of growing food or clearing land in which wild or forested land is clear-cut and any remaining vegetation is burned
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12
Soil degradation
It is the decline in soil condition caused by its improper use or poor management, usually for agricultural, industrial, or urban purposes
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13
Salinization
Water that is not absorbed into the soil evaporates, leaving behind dissolved salts in topsoil
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14
Drip
Water is delivered at the root zone of a plant through small tubes that drip water at a measured rate
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15
Flood
Water is pumped or brought to the fields and is allowed to flow along the ground among the crops
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16
Furrow (Channel)
Small parallel channels are dug along the field length in the direction of the predominant slope
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17
Spray
Uses overhead sprinklers, sprays or guns to spray water onto crops
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18
Pesticides
These can be used to control pests, but their use has drawbacks
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19
Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
It is an ecologically based approach to control pests
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20
Biological Pesticides
Living organisms used to control pests
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21
Carbamates
Also known as urethanes, affect the nervous system of pests, which results in the swelling of tissue in the pest
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22
Fumigants
These are used to sterilize soil and prevent pest infestation of stored grain
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23
Inorganic pesticides
These are broad-based pesticides that include arsenic, copper, lead, and mercury
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24
Organic pesticides
These are natural poisons derived from plants such as tobacco or chrysanthemum
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25
Organophosphates
These are extremely toxic but remain in the environment for only a brief time
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26
Persistent organic pollutants (POPS)
These organic compounds can pass through and accumulate in living organisms' fatty tissues because they don't break down chemically or biologically
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27
Pesticide resistance
It describes the decreased susceptibility of a pest population to a pesticide that was previously effective at controlling the pest
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28
Pest species
They evolve pesticide resistance via natural selection
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29
Pesticide Treadmill
Also known as pest traps; farmers are forced to use more and more toxic chemicals to control pesticide-resistant insects and weeds
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30
Intercropping
A farming method that involves planting or growing more than one crop at the same time and on the same piece of land
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31
Polyculture
The simultaneous cultivation or raising of several crops or types of animals
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32
Genetic resistance
An inherited change in the genetic makeup of the pests that confers a selective survival advantage
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33
CAFO
It is an intensive animal feeding operation in which large numbers of animals are confined in feeding pens for over 45 days a year
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34
Aquaculture
Mariculture or fish farming
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35
Mining
Removing mineral resource from the ground
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36
Dredging
A method for mining below the water table and usually associated with gold mining
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37
In situ
Small holes are drilled into the Earth and toxic chemical solvents are injected to extract the resource
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38
Mountaintop removal
Removal of mountaintops to expose coal seams and disposing of associated mining overburden in adjacent "valley fills"
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39
Open pit
Extracting rock or minerals from the Earth by their removal from an open pit when deposits of commercially useful ore or rocks are found near the surface
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40
Strip mining
Exposes coal by removing the soil above each coal seam
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41
Blast
Uses explosives to break up the seam, after which the material is loaded onto conveyors and transported to a processing center
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42
Longwall
Uses a rotating drum with "teeth," which is pulled back and forth across a coal seam-the material then breaks loose and is transported to the surface
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43
Room and pillar
Approximately half of the coal is left in place as pillars to support the roof of the active mining area
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44
Job sprawl
It has low-density, geographically spread-out employment patterns, with most jobs in a metropolitan area outside the central business district and increasingly in the suburbs
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45
Single-use development
Separate commercial, residential, institutional, and industrial areas
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46
Smart growth
It promotes compact, transit-oriented, walkable, bicycle-friendly land use, neighborhood schools, and mixed-use development with a variety of housing options to slow urban sprawl and concentrate growth in compact, walkable "urban villages."
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47
Adopting mixed-use planning
Combining residential, commercial, cultural, institutional, and/or industrial uses in a specific location
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48
Ecological Footprint
A measure of human demand on Earths ecosystems and is a standardized measure of demand for natural capital that may be contrasted with the planets ecological capacity to regenerate
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49
Contour plowing
Plowing along the contours of the land in order to minimize soil erosion
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50
No-till agriculture
Soil is left undisturbed by tillage and the residue is left on the soil surface
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51
Planting perennial crops
Perennials live for several years; e.g., fruit trees
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52
Strip cropping
Cultivation in which different crops are sown in alternate strips
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53
Terracing
Make or form (sloping land) into a number of level flat areas resembling a series of steps
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54
Windbreaks
Rows of trees that provide shelter or protection from the wind
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55
Mining
Can involve underground mines, drilling, room-and-pillar mining, long-wall mining, open pit, dredging, contour strip mining, and mountaintop removal.
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56
First Green Revolution
The introduction of inorganic fertilizers, synthetic pesticides, new irrigation methods, and disease-resistant, high-yielding crop seeds.
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57
Second Agricultural Revolution
In the mid-1980s, new engineering techniques and free-trade agreements involving food production property rights shaped agricultural policies and food production and distribution systems worldwide.
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58
Second Agricultural Revolution
This revolution saw the development and spread of genetically modified organisms (GMOs)—animals, plants, and microorganisms—with genes that don't exist in nature.
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59
Third Agricultural Revolution
Mechanization such as tractors and combines requires less labor and makes food prices more affordable.
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60
Third Agricultural Revolution
Scientific farming methods such as biotechnology, genetic engineering, and the use of pesticides are now beginning to focus on more sustainable methods.
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61
Second Agricultural Revolution
  • Occurred at the same time as the Industrial Revolution—mechanization had a major role in this revolution and changed the way people farmed.

  • Advances were made in breeding livestock.

  • Increased agricultural output made it possible to feed large, urban populations.

  • Methods of soil preparation, fertilization, crop care, and harvesting improved.

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62
Second Agricultural Revolution
  • New banking and lending practices helped farmers afford new equipment and seed.

  • New crops came into Europe from trade with the Americas.

  • Railroads allowed distribution of products.

  • The invention of the seed drill allowed farmers to avoid wasting seeds and to plant in rows.

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63
First Agricultural Revolution
  • People went from hunting and gathering to the domestication of plants and animals, which allowed people to settle in areas and create cities.

  • Settled communities permitted people to observe and experiment with plants to learn how they grow and develop.

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