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Feeding the World

Feeding the World. Feeding the World. Famine is the widespread malnutrition and starvation in an area due to a shortage of food, usually caused by a catastrophic event. Modern agriculture practices provide most of the world ’ s population with enough food to survive.

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Feeding the World

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  1. Feeding the World

  2. Feeding the World • Famine is the widespread malnutrition and starvation in an area due to a shortage of food, usually caused by a catastrophic event. • Modern agriculture practices provide most of the world’s population with enough food to survive. • However, some of these practices can cause environmental damage that eventually makes growing food crops more difficult.

  3. Humans and Nutrition • The human body uses food both as a source of energy and as a source of materials for building and maintaining body tissues. • The amount of energy that is available in food is expressed in Calories. One Calorie is equal to 1,000 calories or one kilocalorie.

  4. Humans and Nutrition

  5. Humans and Nutrition • Malnutrition is a disorder of nutrition that results when a person does not consume enough of each of the nutrients that are needed by the human body. • Humans need to get 8 essential amino acids from proteins. This is easily done if a variety of foods is eaten. However, in some parts of the world, the only sources of food may be corn and rice, which contain protein, but lacks one of the essential amino acids. Amino acid deficiency can result from such a limited diet.

  6. Sources of Nutrition • Diet is the type and amount of food that a person eats. A healthy diet is one that maintains a balance of the right amounts of nutrients, minerals, and vitamins. • The foods produced in the greatest amounts worldwide are grains, plants of the grass family whose seeds are rich in carbohydrates. • Besides eating grains, most people eat fruits, vegetables, and smaller amounts of meats, nuts, and other foods that are rich in fats and proteins.

  7. Your Diet • Record your diet. • What did you eat all last week? • Is it Organic? • What could you change in your diet to be more health? • What could you supply for yourself at your home with a garden? • How much food (percent) do you waste off of your plate?

  8. Sources of Nutrition

  9. Diets Around the World • People worldwide generally consume the same major nutrients and eat the same basic kinds of food. • Diets vary by region. • People in more developed countries tend to eat more food and a larger proportion of proteins and fats than people in less developed countries.

  10. Diets Around the World

  11. The Ecology of Food • As the human population grows, farmland replaces forests and grasslands. • Feeding everyone while maintaining natural ecosystems becomes increasingly difficult. • Different kinds of agriculture have different environmental impacts and different levels of efficiency.

  12. Farming • Should farms produce crops for food or for energy. • Groups of 4 (write down pros to your side of the argument)

  13. Food Efficiency • The efficiency of a given type of agriculture is a measure of the quantity of food produced on a given area of land with limited inputs of energy and resources. • An ideal food crop is one that efficiently produces a large amount of food with little negative impact on the environment.

  14. Food Efficiency • On average, more energy, water, and land are used to produced a Calorie of food from animals than to produce a Calorie of food from plants.

  15. Food Efficiency • Thus, a given area of land can usually produce more food for humans when it is used to grow plants than when it is used to raise animals. • The efficiency of raising plants for food is one reason why diets around the world are largely based on plants. • However, meat from animals generally provides more nutrients per gram than most food from plants.

  16. World Food Problems • More food is needed each year to feed the world’s growing population. • World food production has been increasing for decades, but now food production is not increasing as fast as the human population is increasing.

  17. World Food Problems

  18. The Green Revolution • Worldwide, between 1950 and 1970, increases in crop yields resulted from the use of new crop varieties and the application of modern agriculture techniques. • These changes were called the green revolution. Since the 1950s, the green revolution has changed the lives of millions of people.

  19. The Green Revolution • In addition, the green revolution had a negative impact on subsistence farmers, or farmers who grow only enough food for local use. • Before the green revolution, subsistence farmers worked most of the world’s farms. • But they could not afford the equipment, water, ad chemicals needed to grow new crop varieties.

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