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A comprehensive set of flashcards covering key terms and concepts in agribusiness and agricultural practices.
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Agribusiness
The integration of various steps of production in the food-processing industry.
Aquaculture
The practice of raising and harvesting fish and other forms of food that live in water.
Arable Land
Land that is capable of producing food and suitable for farming.
Bid-Rent Theory
The theory that when something is in high demand, such as land near the market, it is going to cost more.
Biodiversity
The variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem.
Carrying Capacity
The maximum number of people that an environment can support.
Clustered Settlement
A rural settlement pattern where family homes and farm buildings are located close together, with farmland surrounding them.
Columbian Exchange
The global movement of plants and animals between Afro-Eurasia and the Americas following the voyage of Christopher Columbus in 1492.
Commercial Agriculture
When crops are grown for profit only and not for personal consumption.
Commodity Chain
A process used by corporations to gather resources and transform them into goods, then transport them to customers.
Community-Supported Agriculture
Plots of land used for growing food that are farmed collectively and used to benefit the whole community.
Crop Rotation
The practice of rotating use of different fields from crop to crop each year to avoid exhausting the soil.
Dairy Farming
Raising animals for the purpose of harvesting milk.
Deforestation
The removal of large tracts of forest by natural or manmade means.
Desertification
The transition of land from fertile to arid.
Dispersed Settlement
A rural settlement pattern characterized by isolated farms rather than clustered villages.
Distance Decay
A geographical theory that states that the interaction between two places decreases as the distance between them increases.
Domestication
Raising plants and animals for human use.
Double Cropping
The planting and harvesting of the same parcel of land twice a year.
Enclosure Acts
A series of laws enacted by the British Government that enabled landowners to purchase and enclose land for their own use.
Extensive Farming
Agriculture that uses fewer inputs of capital and paid labor relative to the amount of space being used.
Fair Trade Movement
An effort to promote higher incomes for farmers, particularly in developing countries, and to protect workers’ rights.
Feedlot
Places where livestock are concentrated in a very small area and raised on hormones and hearty grains.
Fertile Crescent
A region of land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in the Middle East.
Fertilizer
A chemical or natural substance added to soil or land to increase its fertility.
Food Desert
A community where there is no access to fresh, healthy, affordable food options.
Genetically Modified Organisms
A crop whose genetic structure has been altered to make it more useful for human purposes.
Grain Farming
Growing of grains, primarily wheat, for the consumption of people.
Green Revolution
The development of higher-yielding, disease-resistant, faster-growing varieties of grains.
Horticulture
A type of agriculture that produces perishable items that farmers need to get to the market quickly.
Intensive Farming
Agriculture that involves greater inputs of capital and paid labor relative to the amount of space being used.
Irrigation
The process of diverting water from its natural course to aid in the production of crops.
Linear Settlement
A settlement pattern in which farms are clustered along a road with fields behind them.
Long Lot
A rural survey method involving long rectangular plots of farmland along rivers.
Luxury Crops
Crops that are not essential to human survival but have a high profit margin.
Market Gardening
Growing of fruits and vegetables primarily for freezing and canning.
Mediterranean Farming
Agriculture practiced in regions with hot dry summers and mild winters.
Metes & Bounds
A rural survey method where land is divided based on the features of the physical landscape.
Mixed Crop/Livestock Farming
An integrated system where crops grown are used to feed livestock.
Monoculture
Specializing in the growing of a single crop.
Neolithic Agricultural Revolution
The origin of farming, marked by the initial domestication of plants and animals.
Organic Food
Food produced without the use of pesticides, synthetic fertilizers, or other unnatural processes.
Pastoral Nomadism
The movement of herds of animals to different pastures within a territory.
Pesticides
A substance used for destroying harmful organisms in cultivated plants or animals.
Plantation Farming
Large commercial farming specializing in one crop.
Ranching
The commercial grazing of animals confined to a specific area.
Second Agricultural Revolution
Beginning in the 1700s, the advances of the Industrial Revolution were used to increase food supplies.
Shifting Cultivation
Farming that involves moving crops from one field to another.
Soil Degradation
When soil loses its ability to support plant growth and is more easily eroded.
Soil Salinization
When irrigated soil in an arid climate becomes infertile due to salt residue.
Subsistence Agriculture
When farmers grow food crops to feed themselves and their families.
Suitcase Farm
A farm on which no one lives, and the planting is performed by nearby farmers.
Sustainability
Use of the Earth’s resources that ensure their availability for future generations.
Terrace Farming
When humans build steps into the side of a hill for agriculture.
Third Agricultural Revolution
The revolution that began in the 1960s marked by the agribusiness model.
Township & Range
A rural survey method where land is divided using latitude and longitude.
Urban Agriculture
The practice of cultivating, processing, and distributing food in or around towns.
Von Thunen's Land Use Model
An economic model suggesting a pattern for farmers' products relative to market positions.