3.2.4.2 environment and population Flashcards
What does data show us about food consumption in recent years?
The dietary energy has been steadily increasing on a worldwide basis; availability of calories per capita from the mid 1960s to the late 1990s increased globally by around 450 kcal per capital per day and by over 600 kcal per capita in developing countries. The per capita supply of calories has remained almost stagnant in sub-Saharan Africa and has recently fallen in the countries in economic transition.
What is undernourishment or hunger according to FAO?
Dietary intake below the minimum daily energy requirement
How do dietary energy requirements differ?
Gender, age and different levels of physical activity
Is the dietary energy requirements the same for every country?
The amount of energy needed for light activity and minimum acceptable weight for attained height varies by country depending on the gender and age structure of the population. It ranges between 1,700 and 2,000 kcal per day
How is undernourishment calculated?
Using the average amount of food available for consumption, the size of the population, the relative disparities in access to food and the minimum calories required for each individual
How many people were undernourished in 2012 according to FAO?
868 million
Are more people becoming undernourished?
No - undernourishment has decreased across the world since 1990, in all regions except Africa where it has steadily increased
What is the Millennium Development Goal concerning hunger? Has it been reached?
Halve hunger between 1990 and 2015 - not reached due to decrease not big enough
What caused lots of people to go hungry?
The global financial, economic and food-price crisis in 2008 - especially issue for women and children - sudden increase in prices prevented many people from escaping poverty, because the poor spend a larger proportion of their income on food and subsistence farmers are net consumers of food
How can farms be considered open systems?
Inputs:
Physical - temperature, precipitation, rainfall
Cultural - farm size, local diet
Economic: farm machinery, money availability
Behavioural (the farmer): Age and experience, openness to new ideas
Processes:
e.g. jobs on the farm - ploughing, weeding, harvesting
OR
calving, milking, feeding
Outputs:
e.g. products from the farm
Fruit, animal products (milk), vegetable crops
Losses:
Soil erosion, leaching of soil nutrients
Hazards:
Drought, hail, fire, crop disease
What is commercial farming?
it is carried out so that the majority of the produce is sold and the income generated can provide a livelihood for the farm workers as well as be invested back into the farm
What is subsistence farming?
This means that the majority of the produce is consumed by the landowner and the farm workers, though a little surplus may be sold to buy other living requirements and/or be invested in the farm
What is intensive farming?
It is usually relatively small scale and is usually:
- capital intensive: money invested in soil improvement, machinery, buildings, pest control, high-quality animals. There are few people employed and so output is high per hectare and per worker, e.g. tomato production in the Netherlands
- labour intensive: the number of farm workers is high and so there is high output per hectare but a low output per worker, e.g. rice cultivation in the Ganges valley
What is extensive farming?
farming is carried out on a large scale over a large area - varies greatly - areas where although labour force is low there is high capital per input e.g. on quality seeds/animals or pesticides and insecticides e.g. wheat farming in the Canadian Prairies - other areas still have low labour force but rely on sheer amount of land they are farming to provide sufficient output for their needs e.g. sheep ranching Australia
What is agricultural productivity?
key measure of the economic performance of agriculture and an important driver of farm incomes - represents how efficiently the agricultural industry uses the resources that are available to turn inputs into outputs
it is a relative measure - see if improvements are made by comparing one year to another
assessing potential for greater productivity is a critical first step on the pathway to producing more with less
need to consider longer-term trends from year-to-year often shaped by factors outside farmers control