Unit 5: Agriculture and Rural Land-Use Patterns and Processes (copy)

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 1 person
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/68

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

69 Terms

1
New cards

primary economy

timber, fisheries, and mineral and energy resources

2
New cards

intensive agriculture

requires lots of labor input, or is focused on a small plot of land, or both

3
New cards

extensive agriculture

requires limited labor input, or is spread across large areas of land, or both

4
New cards

transhumance

where groups move seasonally not only to avoid harsh climates, climates, but also to follow animal herds and walk to areas where native plants were in fruit

5
New cards

pastoralism

agriculture based on the seasonal movement of animals from winter to summer pastures and back again

6
New cards

nomadic herding

a practice where whole communities would drive their herds from one seasonal grazing area to another following an annual cycle that was repeated over centuries

7
New cards

ranching

grazing livestock in a single large area,

8
New cards

mixed farming, or general farming

where multiple crops and animals exist on a single farm to provide diverse nutritional intake and non-food items, such as bone for tools and leather for different materials such as saddles, rope, and coats

9
New cards

subsistence agriculture

intensive mixed farming that provides for all of the food and material needs of a household

10
New cards

extensive subsistence agriculture

occurs when there are low amounts of labor inputs per unit of land

11
New cards

physiologic density

the number of people per unit of arable land

12
New cards

food preservation

a necessity for survival for thousands of years via drying, pickling, cooking, and storage jars that has led to many cultural variations in food consumption

13
New cards

(EX food preservation)

cabbages spiced with red pepper and soaked in vinegar were buried in clay storage jars to make kimchi in Korea eight thousand years ago)

14
New cards

cash-cropping

a form of extensive agriculture in which harvested crops are exchanged for currency, goods, or credit

15
New cards

cash-cropping result

a system that had no surplus food and not much variety available to consumers

16
New cards

human ecology

human interactions with nature

17
New cards

food chain

the order of predators in the animal world that is used to describe several integrated human and mechanical inputs, from developing seeds to planting, fertilizing, harvesting, processing, packaging, and transporting food to market and finally to your dinner plate

18
New cards

crop rotation

occurs when one crop is planted on a plot of land and then switched to another plot in subsequent years

19
New cards

multi-cropping

the planting of more than one crop on the same plot of land

20
New cards

(EX multi-cropping)

after summer vegetables are harvested, winter vegetables like kale and spinach can be planted and harvested before the cold)

21
New cards

double cropping

planting two crops one after another on a single plot in a year

22
New cards

triple cropping

planting three crops in the same year

23
New cards

irrigation

opens up more land to cultivation than would normally be possible in arid climates and is responsible for close to three-quarters of world freshwater use and up to 90 percent of freshwater use in the most poverty-stricken countries of the world

24
New cards

aquifers

underground water tables that gives water to irrigation farms

25
New cards

conservation

the practice of preserving and carefully managing the environment and its natural resources

26
New cards

conservation agriculture

an increasingly important way of providing a sustainable farming system without sacrificing crop production

27
New cards

no-tillage

involves not plowing the soil so that soil erosion is greatly reduced and soil fertility is increased by retaining natural vegetation

28
New cards

inter-planting

planting fast-growing crops alongside slow-growing crops, allowing a farmer to harvest the fast-growing crop before the slow-growing crop shades it out

29
New cards

sustainable yield

the amount of crops or animals that can be raised without endangering local resources such as soil, irrigation, or groundwater, or what can be raised without too many expensive inputs that would make farming unprofitable

30
New cards

(EX sustainable yield)

corn has been used to make ethanol, an alcohol that can supplement gasoline and make it burn cleaner)

31
New cards

slash and burn agriculture

occurred in tropical rainforest regions with farmers shifting from one plot of land to another every few years as soil nutrients become depleted

32
New cards

extensive pastoralism

the shifting of animal herds between grazing pastures, has remained popular in several arid parts of the world, especially Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia, where dry grassland is the common landcover

33
New cards

desertification

any human process that turns a vegetated environment into a desert-like landscape

34
New cards

soil salination

the evaporation of water that can trap mineral salts on the surface soil layer

35
New cards

vegetative planting

where the shoots, stems, and roots of existing wild plants were collected and grown together

36
New cards

seed agriculture

where the fertilized seed grains and fruits of plants were collected and replanted together

37
New cards

horticulture

where plant varieties that thrived in different soil or climate conditions were cultivated

38
New cards

hearths of domestication

the areas where most of this early agricultural activity originated

39
New cards

the Columbian exchange

domesticated New World crops that made their way to the rest of the world through relocation diffusion

40
New cards

(EX the Columbian exchange

maize, from the new world, and wheat, from the old world, were exchanged)

41
New cards

Green Revolution

occurred in the 1950s and 1960s when tropical plant and animal hybrids and chemical fertilizers and pesticides began to be used in Third-World agriculture

42
New cards

primary economic activity

farmers now produce one or more crops

43
New cards

secondary economic activity

process the crop

44
New cards

tertiary economic activity

advertise and market it through afarmers co-op or other market

45
New cards

Recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone, or rBGH

a synthetic hormone widely used in both the production of beef and milk in the United States and some other countries

46
New cards

downer cattle

beef cows that appear ill or are lame and cannot be used for human consumption, but can wind up in pet food or animal feed instead

47
New cards

organic

crops and animals must not be grown using genetic engineering, must be free of pesticides, antibiotics, and synthetic hormones, must not use artificial fertilizers, and must feed on completely organic crops

48
New cards

grass-fed cattle have also brought significantly higher prices to gourmet consumers who seek the more natural-tasting beef, as corn

and soy-based cattle feed has been blamed for less flavorful beef

49
New cards

fair trade movement

focuses on ensuring that small farmers and artisans are paid a fair price for their products

50
New cards

suitcase farmers

farm owners who have city jobs but still own land in rural areas

51
New cards

community-supported agriculture (CSA)

programs in which produce and other farm products are delivered directly to individual consumers

52
New cards

milkshed

the region around a city to which fresh milk is delivered without spoiling In terms of travel time and distance

53
New cards

ultra-high temperature (UHT) pasteurization

a new milk preservation method where milk is flash-pasteurized at very high temperatures and under pressure to keep the water in it from turning to steam and then stored in a sterile box container that is sealed in plastic to prevent contamination

54
New cards

commodity chains

links between producers and consumers in the journey from raw material to delivery of a finished product

55
New cards

Inputs

Farming requires a number of elements to maximize both the size and quality of crop yield, such as fertilizers, pesticides and insecticides, water, tools, mechanical equipment, training, certifications, and research & development

56
New cards

Production

Growing and harvesting crops takes place

57
New cards

Processing

Raw agricultural goods are turned into consumer products

58
New cards

Distribution

Agricultural products are sent to market by contracting with outside transport providers

59
New cards

Consumption

retailers and restaurants sell the final product to consumers

60
New cards

commodity-dependent

when a single product or type of good accounts for more than 60% of its exports

61
New cards

Von Thünens Model

land use (the type of farming) is determined by how labor intensive the type of farming is

62
New cards

Village

the organization of a central marketplace and place of consumption for the agricultural goods produced in the surrounding area

63
New cards

Intensive Farming

Labor-intensive crops include fruits, garden vegetables, herbs, and anything that required constant tending or weeding or that needed to be picked for market at a particular time

64
New cards

Village Forest

A managed forest was needed to meet the energy and lumber needs of the community

65
New cards

Extensive Farming

Labor-extensive crops require large plots of land and far less tending because they dominated potential weed invaders

66
New cards

Grazing Lands

Highlands in peripheral areas were often not suitable for crop farming but perfect for grazing

67
New cards

cost-to-distance relationship

an inverse relationship between the value of labor and the distance from the center of the model; the higher the total labor costs, the closer it is to the center, and the lower the labor costs, the farther it is from the center

68
New cards

land-rent curve

a mathematical function that shows the changes in rent prices across the model

69
New cards

primary economy

timber, fisheries, and mineral and energy resources