The Role of Cultivated Plants in the Living World
Download
Report
Transcript The Role of Cultivated Plants in the Living World
The Role of Cultivated Plants in
the Living World
Crop Science 1
Fall 2004
Who are Plant Scientists?
• The first plant scientists were those who:
– Observed how plants grew
– Developed ideas about the process and how to
improve it
– Tested those ideas
– Came to conclusions
What if there were no Plants?
• Without animals plants would survive
and/or flourish
• Without plants all animals would die
• Without humans most farmed plants would
become extinct
Plants as a Food Source
• Plants – autotrophic use sun energy to
create food
• Animals – heterotrophic depend upon plants
for their food
• Photosynthesis – Carbon dioxide (air) +
water (roots) = carbohydrates
• Photosynthesis occurs in leaves and other
green parts (chloroplasts)
Cultivation
• Definition: the growing or tending of crops
• Cultivation came into use about 18,000 years ago
(10,000 years after modern humans)
• 18,000 years ago – Egypt - Cereals (Wheat,
Barley)
• 6,000 years ago – Europe – Cereals
• 5,000 years ago – Mexico – Corn
• 3,500 years ago – South America – Potatoes
• 3,500 years ago - Far East - Rice
Feeding the World’s Population
•
•
•
•
•
•
Cereal Crops
Roots and Tubers
Oil Crops
Sugar
Fruit Crops
Vegetable Crops
Cereal Crops
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Wheat
Maize (Corn)
Rice
Barley
Oats
Sorghum
Rye
Millet
Over ½ the world’s food
supply comes from these
Roots and Tubers
• Potatoes
• Sweet Potatoes
• Cassavas
Oil Crops
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Soybeans
Corn
Peanuts
Palm
Coconut
Sunflowers
Olive
Safflower
Sugar
• Sugar Cane
• Sugar Beets
Fruit Crops
•
•
•
•
•
Bananas
Oranges
Apples
Pears
Etc.
Vegetable Crops
•
•
•
•
•
Lettuce
Carrots
Broccoli
Asparagus
Etc.
Some Important Food Crops
Ranked According to Calorie
Table 1-1
and Protein Production per
Unit of Land Area
Protein
Calories
Rank
Produced per Produced per
Unit Area
Unit Area
1
Sugar Cane
Soybeans
2
Potato
Potato
3
Sugar Beets
Corn
4
Corn
Peanuts
5
Rice
Sorghum
6
Sorghum
Peas
7
Sweet Potato
Beans
8
Barley
Rice
9
Peanuts
Barley
10
Winter Wheat Winter Wheat
Energy Transformation
• 22 pounds of grain to produce 2.2 pounds of beef
• Bushel of grain = protein requirement for 23
people
– If fed to chickens energy for 2 and protein requirement
for 8 people
• Animals consume grain that is not edible to
humans and produce protein of a higher quality
and provide necessary minerals and vitamins
Past and Present
• 1970’s brink of famine, ecological disaster
• 1980’s reversal of projection
• Reversal was achieved by:
– Agricultural research available to developing countries
– New Cultivars – cultivated varieties (wheat, corn, rice)
• By 2009, food consumption in nearly ½ of the
developing countries will not meet nutritional
standards
Non-Food Benefits
• Wood and wood products
– Building material, fuel, landscape, paper, etc.
• Textiles from fiber-producing crops
– Clothing, rope, twine, burlap and etc.
• Drugs and medicines
– Aspirin from willow trees, codeine from
poppies, tobacco
Non-Food Benefits
• Industrial
– Latex from rubber tree
– Pitch, turpentine and resin from pine trees
• Aesthetic
– Perfumes and spices
• Environmental
– Erosion control
– Oxygen
Challenges for the Future
• New challenges more social than production
• Starvation Exists – social, political reasons
• Increased GMO’s (genetically modified
organisms)
– Round-up Ready, Flavr Savr, Rice w/vitamin A
Lab Assignment
• Divide into Groups of 3-4
• Using the internet research:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
World Food Supply – 1800-2010
World Population – 1800-2010
U.S. Corn Yield – 1700-2010
Average U.S. Farm Size – 1700-2010
Average World Farm Size – 1700-2010
Top 25 Commodities in U.S. 2000
Pick 3 California Counties – top 10 commodities
• Email [email protected]