Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Agroecology
University of Guelph AGR*2050
355
Agriculture
Undergraduate 2
01/16/2014

Additional Agriculture Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Ecological Interactions
Definition

There are hundreds of these in any ecosystem.

They may occur between plants, animals, soil, and humans.

Term
Ripple Effect
Definition
When you change one aspect of an ecostyem, even a small aspect, it can have huge effects on the whole ecosystem. Every ecosystem has pressure points. Because of this there are never any clear-cut solutions to ecological problems.
Term
Agroecosystem
Definition
An ecosystem governed by humans. Agriculture is a type of ecosystem. They tend to be leaky. Fertilizers run off into the natrual ecosystems. They resopond to societal demands and pressures and changes in techology.
Term
Run-off
Definition

When water leaches or runs off from an agroecosystem, bringing fertilizers with it. This is expensive for the farmer and it can be harmful to the natural ecosystems. It may cause eutrophication in local ponds and streams.

It can cause health issues if the water is used as a water source for humans.

Term
Eutrophication
Definition
When N fertilizer run-off is very high in a stream, lake, pond, or other body of water, algae flourishes. The algae use up all the oxygen in the water, causing the other lifeforms to suffocate. This causes Dead Zones in the oceans.
Term
Deforestation
Definition
The cutting down of trees and other plant-life in an area to make room for an agroecosystem or other human activities. It destroys much biodiversity.
Term
Biodiversity
Definition
The variety of different species in an ecosystem. The more of this an ecosystem has, the more stable it is. It acts as a buffer for the ecosystem. Fewer keystone species, so less risk of the ecosystem falling apart if just one species is lost.
Term
Soil degradation
Definition

A decrease in soil organic manic matter and erosion are symptoms of this. It can result in dust storms and poor soil quality for growing crops.

This is found commonly in agroecosystems. One way to protect from this is cover crops.

Term
Pesticide resistance
Definition
Pests (insects, weeds, parasites) evolving to become resistant to common pesticides. This is due to high use of the pesticides without much rotation.
Term
Apathy
Definition
One of the top environmental issues surrounding agriculture. People resist change, especially when the problem is not apparent to them. Example: global warming.
Term
Global warming
Definition

The phenomenon of increasing global temperatures due to human activities. It has been known for a decade now, but it is only becoming a public concern recently, due to a general apathy towards the subject.

We are seeing more weather extremes: hurricanes, cold snaps, heat waves. Increased risk of management in agriculture.

Term
Human population growth
Definition
This is placing huge demands on the food system. Currently the world is at 7 billion, but it is predicted to increase to 8.3 billiion by 2050 and 10.1 billion by 2100. We will need to to more with less on the same amount of land. Especially Asia and Africa need to improve agriculture. Need to increase yields by 60%. Better adapted varieties, biotechnology.
Term
Habitat loss
Definition
Human activites destroying, fragmenting, or degrading habitats for species, results in stranded species struggling to survive, sometimes in extinction.
Term
Fresh water
Definition
Clean, high quality water. This is a resource taken for granted in Canada. You don't miss this until it is gone.
Term
Unsustainable production
Definition
Agricultural production where resources are taken from the soil and not replaced. Fertilizer is wasted through run-off.
Term
Greenhouse effect
Definition
Heat is being trapped in the atmosphere due to chemicals in the air called greenhouse gases. This can cause severe storms. The gases absorb solar radiation. The name is misleading; a greenhouse does not heat up in this way.
Term
Invasive species
Definition

A species that invades an area it does not normally live in. They may dominate an ecosystem, choking out native species. They can cause a change in pests, making pest control difficult for farmers.

For weeds simply pulling them from the ground does little good since the forest seed bank already has their seeds.

Term
Desertification
Definition
Areas turning into deserts due to human activities.
Term
Ecological Service
Definition

Each species in an ecosystem performs a number functions, such as producer (plants), population control (predator), nitrogen fixation, the list goes on and on. 

This is what those functions are called.

It is difficult to put a price on this.

Term
Keystone species
Definition
A species that is the only species performing a certain ecological service in an ecosystem. If this species is lost, the entire ecosystem could fall apart. Biodiverse ecosystems have less of these (numerous species perform every service) and are therefore more stable.
Term
Extinction
Definition

The death of an entire species. Species have died out since the begining of life: it is one of the pillars of evolution. 

It is not the number of species lost that is concerning, it is the ecologcial services lost.

Term
Monoculture
Definition

The planting of a single crop on a plot of land year after year with little to no rotation. Common crops for this are corn and wheat.

Overall this reduces yields.

Term
Corn
Definition

A crop that was domesticated in the Balsas River Valley in Mexico up to 8000 years ago from its ancestor teosinte. It is used mainly for animal feed. It has high water, light, temperature, and growing season needs. Not efficient to grow on marginal lands. The optimum temperature to grow it at is 24 to 30C. It can grow at higher temperatures but then its water needs are increased. High temperatures can reduce pollen viability. Cold soil temperatures delay early season growth. Low night temperatures can damage it. If there is a drought during the flowering stage, the whole crop may be lost.

50% of the carbon in this plant goes to the grain portion.

They are breeding it to be short season, drought resistant, and light efficient among other things.

Term
Ogallala Aquifer
Definition
An underground water source in 7 states of the US including Nebraska. It supplies farmers with irrigation water. It is being depleted at an unsustainable rate. This is an example of the Tragedy of the Commons.
Term
Tragedy of the Commons
Definition
A concept saying that if a certain resource is public to common use, each user will over-exploit the resource in order to get ahead of his neighbor and reap maximum benefits. This goes on until the resource is completely used up.
Term
The Dead Zone
Definition
A 11000 km2 zone in the Gulf of Mexico each spring where high-nutrient fresh water from rivers causes algal blooms and oxygen deficiency. All fish and other oxygen-breathing life die and float to the surface.
Term
Systems Thinking
Definition

A mode of thought about ecology in which the ripple effect is taken into consideration. Focuses on the large number of interactions between elements in an ecosystem.

Works best for complex problems, recurring problems where past attempts made it worse, and issues where a solution is not obvious.

Term
Traditional Analyses
Definition
A mode of thinking about ecology where the focus is on individual pieces of an ecosystem.
Term
Reduction science
Definition
A mode of thinking about ecology where the constituents of an ecosystem are broken up into parts.
Term
Agriculture
Definition

A form of ecolocial management used to make food for humans. It is rooted in maximizing production, economic return, and production efficiency. It is part of the larger ecosystem.

It was invented/discovered by ancient people to create a permanent source of food. They wanted a secure food source in a time of climate change and population growth. It has less work, more production, and a broader diet. It originated in multiple areas of the world around the same time period. Some species were domesticated in multiple centers. These areas do not necessarily co-incide with the world's most fertile lands.

Term
Ecosystem
Definition
The sum of interactions between a large number of biotic and abiotic factors in an environment incliding animals, plants, soil life, bacteria, soil nutrients, light, temperature, and water. An agroecosystem also includes human activities.
Term
Domestication Syndrome
Definition

When a plant is domesticated it shows traits more useful to humans such as:

-Larger fruits or edible parts

-No seed dispersal

-Seeds have a dormancy period

-Main stem is tillered

-Size of plant is increased

-Reduced in toxic compounds.

Term
Slash-and-Burn
Definition
An unsustainable agricultural method in which all the vegetation in an area is cut down and burned and crops are planted in the ashes. This is releases the carbon into the air, wasting it, and it requires new land to harvest every growing season.
Term
Seed Agriculture
Definition
One of the early forms of agriculture in which seeds were saved over the winter and replanted in the spring.
Term
Tropical Agriculture
Definition
Vegetatively propogated crops are popular. Crops grow easily, but there is great disease stress.
Term
Paddy rice farming
Definition
A form of agricultur very popular in Asia. Fields are flooded and rice is planted. Anaerobic decomposition occurs, releasing methane. It accounts for 11% of the world's methane emissions. The soil has 2,800 kh/ha of indigenous nitrogen and 1 to 4% is taken up in crops.
Term
Dryland farming
Definition

Animals are grazed on the land; sometimes this is the only type of agriculture this land can handle.

For plant systems, unwanted vegetation is controlled, fallow periods are used, but never cover crops. Less fertilizers are used because the plants are already growing slowly and there would be no point. Less pesticides for economic reasons.

Term
Irrigation
Definition
The watering of crops. Agriculture is dependent on local lakes and rivers to supply water. Dams for irrigation date back as far as 4000 BC. Today 70% of the world's freshwater comes from agriculture. 18% of cropland is irrigated and it produces 40 to 45% of the world's food.
Term
Crop migration
Definition
It is easier for crops to migrate east/west than it is north/south. This is due to climates and seasons, but mostly photoperiod. It takes a long time for a plant to go from being a short day plant to a long day plant.
Term
Companion crops
Definition
A set of crops that grow very well when intercropped and supply a rounded diet. Usually a nitrogen fixator and protein source coupled with a carbohydrate source.
Term
The Three Sisters
Definition

A companion crop triplet planted by the Native Americans. It is maize, beans, and squash. The beans and maize provide stalks for the squash to grow on. The squash acts as a ground cover, reducing weeds. The beans fix nitrogen in the soil. The three crops together complete a human's protein needs. When intercropped, these three produce higher yields than they would planted separately.

There is a little-known 4th sister: the Rocky Mountain bee plant. It attracts pollinators to the squash and bean flowers.

Term
Incan terraces
Definition
Terraces built in South America long ago. They prevent against run-off and the stones insulate and prevent frost or overheating. The system is still in use today.
Term
European agriculture
Definition
Low productivity, but a very long-lasting and sustainable, stable ecosystem. The three field system is used.
Term
Three Fields system
Definition
A system of crop rotation used in medieval Europe where the land is split in threes: one grows wheat/rye/oats/barley, one grows legumes or is used for grazing, and one is ploughed and fallowed. The three field uses are rotated each year. Very sustainable.
Term
Agricultural Revolution
Definition
The first agricultural revolution. Crops are domesicated and cultivated, cities form.
Term
Globalization Revolution
Definition
The second agricultural revolution. Columbus brings new crops from the new world. Species are exchanged and there is diversification.
Term
Industrial Revolution
Definition
The third agricultural revolution. The stem engine was invented in 1776, but wasn't used for tractors until 100 years later. The Haber-Bosch process revolutionized agriculture, we no loner relied on environmental characteristics and the nitrogen cycle anymore. Scienctists like Mendel and Darwin changed breeding tactics.
Term
The Green Revolution
Definition

The fourth agricultural revolution (1940-late 1970s). Lead mainly by Norman Borlaug, a plant breeder. Plants now

-respond better to fertilizer

-have more stress tolerance

-insensitive to photoperiod

-reduced in size so that there is less lodging and more growth in grains rather than in height

-shorter growing season

-pesticide resistance.

-higher yields.

It also caused:

-decrease in biodiversity

-shorter crop rotation

-increase in pests an weeds

-less ecological resistance to stresses

-widescape monoculture

-deteriorating soil structure and fertility

This revolution was not prominent in poorer countries, only those with high-input systems.

Term
World War Two
Definition
During world war two agriculture was intensified. We went from producing a bushel of corn every 81 minutes to every 2 minutes.
Term
Haber-Bosch process
Definition
A chemical process which uses fuel to convert normal air into nitrogen fertilizer that can be used by farmers. It was invented in WWII. High temperatures and pressures are applied to atmospheric nitrogen and hydrogen (found in the air), making ammonia (N fertilizer). A lot of energy is required. It is expensive. The industry is trying to make it more efficient. 1.2% of the world's energy goes toward it and 1% of CO2 emissions. Natural gas or coal is used for energy. N fertilizer prices rise and fall with fuel prices.
Term

Norman Borlaug

Definition
"The Man Who Saved A Billion Lives". He won the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of his contributions to decreasing world hunger. He bred plants, specifically wheat and rice, to be easier to cultivate. This started the "Green Revolution".
Term
Urban agriculture
Definition

Agricultural practices within or on the fringe of a city or metropolis. It is an interaction between agricultural, natural, and urban ecosystems. A diversity of food and non-food products are raised or grown, procesed, and distributed. It makes use of unused human and material resources in the area. It is experiencing a resurgence not since Victory Gardens of WWII, however it is not just about gardens! 

It creates food security, reduces hunger, increases urban outputs. It is complementary to rural agriculture. 

On an urban planet, cities need to adopt systems to assure their own sustainability in the long-term. Urban outputs should be crucial outputs.

Term
Toronto Urban Agriculture Summit 2012
Definition
A conference held in Toronto where they talked about planning and designing infastructure for small and large-scale urban agricultural projects.
Term
Urban/rural imports/exports
Definition

Urban areas mostly export machinery, money, and wastes. They import food and materials. Toronto imports 6000 tonnes of food daily and none out. It feeds over 10 million people.

Developing countries have little infastructure for this. They have to spend 40% to 60% of their income on food.

Urban agriculture is a way to increase urban outputs.

Term
Urban population growth
Definition

More than half the world lives in an urban area. Nearly all population growth is in urban areas. City population growing 2 to 3 times faster than the country; the equivalent of 5 new cities the size of Beijing every year. The fastest growing cities low-income cities in Asia and Africa. The number of urban-dwellers in Saharan Africa is projected to rise by 45%. The growth is accompanied by poverty, unemployment, and lack of food security. The populations are generally young.

It is driven by high birth rates and rural hunger, poverty, and insecurity, not economic opportunity.

This is a nightmare for politicans. Hunger is historically proven to be very bad for politics.

 

Term
Population of Beijing
Definition
20 million people
Term
Population of Toronto
Definition
3 million people
Term
Population of Canada
Definition
30 million people
Term
2008 food crisis
Definition
In 2008 food prices increased due to drought and high oil prices. People could not afford food. There were riots in the streets. People were hungry.
Term
Advantages of urban agriculture
Definition

-Less transportation (less pollution)

-Lessens atmospheric pollutioin. Fixes carbon from air.

-Rooftop agriculture decreases temperatures inside the building in the summer; less need for air conditioning (electricity, pollution).

-Raises environmental awareness

-Food is fresher. Less risk of perishability

-Short marketing channels

-Reuse city wastes and wastewater

-Conserves urban soils

-Protects environmentally fragile lands

-Makes use of contaminated lands (be careful of heavy metals and other toxins. Keep pH high for safety).

-Saves money

-Huge market in the city for livestock products, horticultural products, and ornamental plants/flowers.

-Creates jobs, improves urban livelihood, generates income. Especially good for impoverished families.

-Improves quality of life

-Creates food security

-Improves nutrition

-Improves the urban environment

-Imroves the microclimate

-Improves biodiversity. Gives a habitat for urban wildlife. Brings in pollinators.

 

Term
Disadvantages of urban agriculture
Definition

-Contaminated soil and water

-Growing near roadsides, food can absorb toxins from cars. Leafy greens especially effected, tubers not as much.

-Land is expensive. Interferes with more productive use of urban lands

-Little time between productio and consumption: pesticide residues.

-Poor management by inexprienced and unknowledgable agriculturalists: misuse of agricultural chemicals.

-Sketchy, unsafe, inefficient improvisations.

-Not simple to co-ordinate. Alliances between growers, community, and regulations.

-Diversion from investments in rural agriculture

Term
Intra-urban agriculture
Definition
Growing within the city: empty lots, rooftops, roadsides, home gardens.
Term
Peri-urban agriculture
Definition
Growing on the fringes of a city.
Term
Horticultural crops
Definition
Well suited for urban agriculture because of high demand, high profits, low economy of scale, and greater labour demand.
Term
Livestock production
Definition
Well suited for urban agriculture because there is a high demand in the city. Small animals may be all that can be managed.
Term
Survival urban agriculture
Definition
Urban agriculture for survival. Can occur urban or per-urban on roadsides, empty lots, and wasteland.
Term
Food supplement urban agriculture
Definition
Urban agriculture as a supplement for current food situation, lessening load on urban imports. Occurs mainly intra-urban in home gardens, rooftops, container gardens, and small animal production.
Term
Mixed food security/commercial urban agriculture
Definition
Urban agriculture for a combination of food and financial security. Can occur peri or intra-urban on hillsides, livestock systems, zero-grazing.
Term
Commercial urban agriculture
Definition
Urban agriculture purely for profits. Occurs mainly peri-urban on wetland valleys, irrigated lands, pig/poultry farms, dairy.
Term
Hydroponics
Definition
A growing method used mainly in urban agriculture. Plants are grown without soil. This only works for some species. Nutrients are in the water. Less total weight of operation (consider the structural capacity of a rooftop). Conserves horizontal space (can be stacked). However, there is poor flavour and nutrition in products: it is difficult to recreate soil complexities.
Term
Aeroponics
Definition
A growing method used mainly in urban agriculture. It is similar to hydroponics, but the roots hang in the air and are misted with a nutrient solution. Plants grow bigger and faster. You can even produce root crops like potatoes in this way.
Term
Rooftop agriculture
Definition

An agricultural method used mainly in urban agriculture. There is a soil or hydroponic system in a greenhouse or in the open air (hydroponics never in open air) on a building's rooftop. Water and heat come from the building.

The world's biggest soil rooftop green house is in New York City. It grows over 40,000 lbs of organic produce a year.

In Montreal there is a 31000 square foot greenhouse producing over 40 crops year-round.

In Asia rice, eggplant, and soybeans are produced on rooftops, although rice requires some innovative techniques.

Term
City self-sustainability
Definition

The ability of a city to supply itself with its own food needs.

 

La Havana is 50%.

Mexico City is over 50%

Beijing is fully self-sustainable.

Term
Urban soil
Definition

Soil having a non-agricultural, manmade surface layer more than 50 cm thick that has been produced by mixing, filling, or by contamination of land surface in urban and suburban areas. Undistributed soil effected by the urban environment. "Anthropogenic" soil. It is:

-little organic matter (although there is soil life)

-highly compacter

-highly eroded

-highly saline

-sometimes infertile

-contaminated

-biological changes associated with chemicals

-increased potentil of invasion of exotic or invasive species

Term
Organic wastes
Definition

A highly underused resource. From urban areas it comes in the form of kitchen wastes and wastewater. 

It may be composted. Vermiculture (worms) can degrade it. 

Term
Composting
Definition
A process in which organic wastes are decomposed by bacteria, releasing heat that kills pathogens including eggs and seeds. It releases gasses and consumes oxygen, but creates very usable fertilizer or toxin absorbant.
Term
Wastewater
Definition
A form of organic waste from urban areas which may be used for irrigation and fertilizatoin. Treated tap water has high competition, so wastewater is cheaper. Can be used in a hydroponics system. However, it must be treated before using in any way because it contains E. coli, cholera, and many other diseases.
Term
Kitchen wastes
Definition
A type of organic waste from urban areas. It may be used as animal feed for pigs or fish. Edmonton composts 60% of their kitchen wastes.
Term
Bioretention system
Definition
A soil improvement process where compost is used to bind and absorb contaminants. It can help with storm water, pollution, and water quality management.
Term
Weather
Definition

The fluctuating state of the atmosphere in a small region over a short-term period. Temperature, wind speed, moisture, precipitation, clouds, fog. It is caused by rapidly developing and decaying air movements, which are caused by pressure differences in the atmosphere.

It effects crop growth.

Term
Climate
Definition

The average weather over a large region over 30 years.

The major ones are tropical, desert, warm temperate, cool temperate, and polar. Climate is determined by latitude (angular intensity of the sun), air currents, latitude, elevation, precipitation, clouds, and seasons.

It determines the kinds of wildlife an area has. It determines what crops can be grown in an area.

Term
Tropical Climate
Definition
Monthly average temperature greater than 18C. No winter seaon. Strong annual precipitation that exceeds evaporation.
Term
Desert Climate
Definition
Annual evaporation exceeds precipitation. No permanent rivers.
Term
Warm Temperate Climate
Definition
The three coldest months average between -3C and 18C. The hottest month average over 10C. The summer and winter seasons are well defined.
Term
Cool Temperate Climate
Definition
The coldest month average temperature is less than -3C. The hottest month average temperature is over 10C. The seasons summer and winter are well defined.
Term
Polar Climate
Definition
The hottest month average temperature is below 10C. The summer season is not very different from the rest of the year.
Term
Trade Winds
Definition
Air currents cause "cells" of air currents in the atmosphere. It results in bands of tropical conditions near the equator. It is one of the determinants of climate.
Term
Air Currents
Definition
They move precipitation and moisture. Warm air is better at holding water. Cold air condenses the water and causes precipitation. Ocean currents and the sun's radiation create "trade winds" which are persistent winds which form "cells" on the globe.
Term
Mountain/Ocean effect
Definition
As prevailing winds pass over the ocean onto the land, they bring lots of moisture. As the air flows over the mountains, it gets colder and all the moisture falls as precipitation. The side of the mountain facing the ocean gets a lot of rain and the other side of the mountain is very dry. This is a factor in climate.
Term
Elevation
Definition
At higher altitudes the air is thinner (less dense) so there is less movement of gas particles. The air is cold. This is a factor in climate.
Term
Ontario
Definition
Ontario is not a flat province. It has altitude differences of 700 m. Yields in Ontario have been increasing. There are year to year variability due to the weather. A common 3 year crop rotation in Ontario is winter wheat/soybean/corn. Less and less of Ontario is pastures and woodlots, and more row crops. Erosion is increasing. Soil productivity decreasing.
Term
Ocean currents
Definition
Water has a higher heat capacity than land, so it heats up faster from the sun, forming currents and effecting wind direction. Winds that come from the ocean are full of moisture. The oceans have cold and warm water currents. Warm water currents provide more moisture to air masses than cold currents. This is a factor in climate.
Term
Desert agriculture
Definition

It is possible to farm in a dessert if you use irrigation. Desserts have better sunlight (few clouds), less weeds and other pests, and less ecological diversity. Pollinators are shipped in. It uses up huge amounts of water. It is an unsustainable food system.

Asparagus needs a vernalization period. Because there is no winter, a period of water stress acts as vernalization.

Term
Precipitation
Definition
Some form of water that falls from clouds. It effects plant biomass, transpiration, soil nutrient availability. It is correlated to light availability (clouds). It has different distributions based on climate.
Term
Drought
Definition
A long period without precipitation. They can have different lengths and intensities. It can reduce crop yields. 10 consecutive days of drought can mean losing an entire crop.
Term
Rice
Definition
Rice is a tropical crop. Rice is more productive during the dry season. It is not about water, it is about sunlight.
Term
Light
Definition

Light from the sun ultimately powers all life and everything on Earth.

Light availability depends on daylength and cloud cover. A plant's ability to recieve light is a factor in light usage.

Term
Agricultural management
Definition

There are different changable factors farmers can implement.

Fertilizer type, amount, and application

Planting/harvesting date

Tillage and cover crops

Pest and disease management

Crop rotations

Term
Ecological factors to crops
Definition

The ecosystem has factors that effect crop growth

The nitrogen and carbon cycles

Soil water holding capacity

Soil fertility

Term
Advantages of planting early
Definition

Early plant emergence

Canopy is filled on the longest days

Better use of stored water at pollination

Earlier canopy closure

Earlier silking at a lower temperature

Warmer nighttime temperatures during grain filling

Earlier maturity, reducing in drying costs

More time in fall for fall operations

Term
Climate change
Definition
Everywhere on the globe the climate is changing. This is causing more frequent and intense weather events (precipitation, extreme temperatures, drought). The averages are not so important as the extremes. It is leaving making vulnerable areas even more unstable. If we plan to sustain crop yields we need to make changes.
Term
Tomatoes
Definition
A crop grown in greenhouses. They are a summer crop but the consumer wants them every day of the year. Natural growing season is from April to September.
Term
Winter Wheat
Definition
Wheat that is planted in the fall. It requires a vernalization period before it can germinate.
Term
No-till
Definition
A system where there is no tillage. In a no-till system the residues of previous crops are left in the field. It keeps in moisture, but delays emergence of early spring growth and delays the degradation of crop residues.
Term
Needs for growing a crop
Definition
Land, light, water, CO2, seeds/biomass, labour, fuel, soil, nutrients (fertilizer/indigenous soil nutrients), biota, organic matter, soil texture and structure.
Term
Atmosphere
Definition
The air. It provides CO2, O2, and other gasses to the biosphere. It recieves O2 and other gases from the biosphere. It has 720 gigatonnes of carbon. It iss 78% nitrogen in the form of atmospheric nitrogen.
Term
Biosphere
Definition
The living organisms. It gives and recieves gasses to the atmosphere. It uptakes nutrients from the pedosphere and gives biota to the pedosphere. Its terrestrial portion has over 2,000 gigatonnes of carbon: 600 to 1,000 in living biomass and 1,200 in dead biomass.
Term
Pedosphere
Definition
The soil. It is dead organic material or non-organic material. It gives nutrients to the biosphere and recieves dead organic material from the biosphere. It recieves raw soil formation elements from the lithosphere, and gives the lithosphere leaching and aggregates.
Term
Lithosphere
Definition
The bedrock shell of the Earth. It recieves leaching and aggregates from the pedosphere. It provides the pedosphere with raw elements for soil formation. It has over 75 million gigatonnes of carbon: 4,130 in fossil fuels, 60 million in carbonate, and 15 million in kerogens.
Term
Hydrosphere
Definition
The water. It is present in all the other -spheres as vapour, clouds, percipitation, life water, runnoff, groundwater, rivers and streams, lakes and ponds, and the oceans. It has 38,400 gigatonnes of carbon: 37,400 in inorganic and 1,000 in organic: 670 near the surface and 36,730 in the deep oceans.
Term
Decomposition
Definition
The process where dead organic material such as crop residues are broken down by soil biota. It creates CO2, water, amino acids, decomposer biomass, short term OM, humus, soil nutrients, soil structure improvement, disease prevention, and pollutant degradation. Organic matter is turned inorganic; nitrates an ammonium are produced. The rate of decomposition depends on pH, moisture, aeration, temerature, the quality and physical form of residues, and C/N ratio.
Term
Soil Biota
Definition
Bacteria, Fungi, Mycorrhizae, Protozoa, Nematodes, Collembola, Mites, Insects, Spiders, and Earthworms. In the winter they become dormant in the soil until spring.
Term
Soil Aggregates
Definition
"Soil glue". Binding agents for water and nutrients to stick to. Sand, silt, clay, soil organic matter, root hairs, microorganisms. Decrease soil erosion and leaching.
Term
Macropores
Definition
Large air pockets in the soil that give the soil with a high water capacity.
Term
Soil fertility
Definition
Determined by indigenous nutrients, soil biota, time of year, soil structure and texture, slope of an area, and rainfall.
Term
Green manure
Definition

A form of soil fertilization where nitrogen fixing plants are grown alongside or in rotation with crops. Nitrogen fixing trees may be intercropped with corn. Red clover may be intercropped with winter wheat. Hairy vetch.

You get the same yield for 40 to 70 kg less fertilizer. This is a sustainable nitrogen input. Crops can still be recovering the nitrogen even years later.

Losses depend on management practices, environment, residue quality, C/N ratio, and time of death of legumes. Killing in the fall casuses less nitrogen in the spring and can lead to leaching. 

Term
Intercropping
Definition
Planting two crops alongside each other. Benfits may be nutritional (nitrogen fixing plants). Some plants (such as coffee) need shade to grow well and may be intercropped with timber trees. C4 plants are not as good with shade as C3 plants.
Term
Nutrient bioavailability
Definition
Each soil nutrient has a pH range at which it is most easily uptaken by plants. Even if all nutrients are present in the soil, the plant may be unable to uptake it and show signs of deficiency.
Term
Salt stress
Definition
When the soil is too saline, the water in the roots of a plant may be sucked out by osmosis even if there is adequate water. The plant will show signs of a water deficiency.
Term
Nitrogen Use Efficiency (NUE)
Definition

The proportion of all N inputs that are removed in harvest crop biomass or stays in the cropping system.

N inputs are 46% N fertilizer 20% biological N fixation, 12% atmospheric deposition, 11% animal manures, 7% crop residues. A good value for this comes with efficient fertilizer, a high PEN value, synchronization between crop N demand and N supply, sound management factors, and biophysical ddeterminants being taken into account.

Term
Nitrogen Recovery Efficiency (REN)
Definition

The percentage of nitrogen fertilizer recovered in above-ground plant biomass in a growing season. There are two methods of measuring it:

1. Using "labelled" nitrogen isotopes to keep track of nitrogen. Very expensive; a lot of paperwork.

2. Count the difference in the amount of N harvested and the amount of N aplied and compare it to a plot which did not recieve fertilizer.

The value for this for preplant fertilizer is 47.8%. Actual farm measure of this is generally lower. The average values for nitrogen fertilizer have gone up sine 1980 due to improved management practices (reduced use in the fall, split applications, and using alternatives to N fertilizer).

Term
Mycorrhizae
Definition
Fungus that infect plants and give them nutrients in return for sugars.
Term
Photosynthesis
Definition

The process by which plants harness sunlight, CO2, and water to make biomass and energy. Water is slplit and the hydrogen is used to fixate carbon into sugars.

CO2 + H2O --> C6H12O6 + O2

It takes place in the thylakoid of a chloroplast. C3 plants will lose some to photorespiration, when C4 plants will not.

Term
Photorespiration
Definition
When O2 instead of CO2 reacts wth ribisco in the leaves of  C3 plant. Energy is lost.
Term
Algae
Definition
The organisms with the highest light harvesting efficiency. They may be farmed.
Term
The light based yield equation
Definition
Ye = ∫(PAR*ABS*RUE) δt*HI
Term
Photosynthetically Active Radiation (PAR)
Definition

How much radiation is available. Depends on clouds and weather. Depends on the wavelength of light; plants can only take light between 400 nm and 700 nm. Depends on latitude and season.

Changes in PAR help plants detect when there is competition around them and grow accordingly.

Term
Developmental plasticity
Definition
A plants ability to monitor changes in PAR quality, wavelength, and direction in light, and change morphology accordingly. Used to time the plant's circadian clock.
Term
Ability to absorb radiation (ABS)
Definition
A canopy's ability to absorb radition. Depends on LAI, leaf angle, crop type, leaf colour and duration, and biotic and abiotic stresses.
Term
Leaf Area Index (LAI)
Definition
The amount of ground covered by leaves of a plant when looking strait down. May be greater than one since the leaves may overlap.
Term
Leaf angle
Definition

Leaves that are angled upwards shade the leaves below them less and the whole plant is better off. 

They have bred corn to have erect leaves.

Term
Radiation Use Efficiency (RUE)
Definition
The efficiency with which a plant converts light into biomass. It has imroved over the years by plant breeding. Some plants naturally can photosynthesize better in the shade.
Term
Blue Sky Project
Definition
A projec that will take years to complete. E.g. breeding rice to be a C4 plant.
Term
Harvest Index (HI)
Definition
The fraction of the biomass harvested as food divided by total plant biomass.
Term
Photoreceptor
Definition
They detect day length in plants. They trigger flowering and time circadian rhythms.
Term
Perennials vs. Anuals
Definition
Perennials have a longer growing season, so they harvest more light.
Term
Plant density
Definition
Effects a plants ability to absorb light. Too close and the canopy is too thick. Too far apart and farming become unprofitable, and/or weeds take over.
Term
Carbon
Definition
The most important element for life. It has over 10 million different possible compounds it can form. It has organic, inorganic, and synthetic compounds.
Term
Inorganic carbon
Definition
Carbon compounds formed from minerals. Includes carbonic acid, carbon dioxide (present at low pH), bicarbonate (present at medium pH), and carbonate (present at high pH).
Term
Organic carbon
Definition
Carbon compounds formed from living organisms: carbohydrates, proteins, celluloe, chlorophyll, et cetera (many, many compounds).
Term
Synthetic carbon
Definition
Carbon compounds that are man-made: nylon, plastic. Derived from petrochemicals.
Term
Carbon cycle
Definition

Carbon sinks bring carbon out of the air and carbon sources release it back into the air.

In agricultural systems carbon losses are harvests and grazing and inputs are manures and crop residues.

Term
Plant residues
Definition
Dead plant matter left over from crops or other plants. Includes corn stover, corn cobs, soybean residue, and wheat straw. It is 75% water. The dry mass is 45% cellulose, 20% lignin, 18% hemicellulose, 8% protein, 5% sugars, 2% lipids, and 2% polyphenols. 15% of this ends up as SOM. Removing this from the field causes nutrient removal, soil erosion, and SOM reduction. In Ontario at least 30% of crop residues must be left in the field.
Term
Lignin
Definition
A very tough substance found in plant residues. It does not decompose easily; it cannot re-enter the carbon cycle.
Term
Metabolic carbon
Definition
Carbon in plant residues that stays in the soil for 0.1 to 0.5 years. It turns into active SOM.
Term
Structural carbon
Definition
Carbon found in plant residues which stays in the soil for 2 to 4 years. It turns into active or slow SOM.
Term
Soil Organic Matter (SOM)
Definition

It depends on the soil type, location and use.

A marsh has 70%, forest has 21%, sod 7% and corn fields 4%. 90% of its mass is water. It acts as an aggregate; promotes soil structure. Forms a bank of nutrients; holds nutrients. Decreases erosion, runoff, soil compaction, crusting. Better water infiltration and capacity. Reducess stresses; temperature, wind, heavy rainfall, drought. Increases long term soil productivity; it turns into soil eventually. Consists of the living (active), the dead (active organic matter), and the very dead (stable humus). 

In Canada it has been improving lately.

Term
Active SOM
Definition
SOM that stays in the soil for 1 to 2 years. It turns into slow SOM.
Term
Slow SOM
Definition

SOM which stays in the soil for 15 to 1000 years. It turns into active or passive SOM.

 

Term
Passive SOM
Definition
SOM which stays in the soil for 500 to 5,000 years. It cannot turn into active SOM.
Term
Humus
Definition
A very stable soil component which may be thousands of years old. Soil is 40% to 45%.
Term
Decomposable soil content
Definition
10% to 15% of the soil. This percentage signifies soil fertility. 20% to 40% of this is living organisms (bacteria, algae, fungi, earthworms, nematodes), and 60% to 80% is plant residues and dead organisms.
Term
Aerobic decomposition
Definition
Decoposition in the presence of oxygen. CO2 is produced.
Term
Anaerobic decomposition
Definition
Decomposition that occurs without oxygen. CH4 (methane) is produced instead of CO2. Rice paddies have this.
Term
Methane
Definition
A greenhouse gas emitted from anaerobic decomposition. 11% of the world's emissions come from rice paddy farming. It is 4 times as worse as CO2 for greenhouse absorption.
Term
Greenhouse gas
Definition
A gas in the atmosphere which absorbs solar radiation, keeping the Earth warm. They include carbon dioxide (56% of absorption), methane (18%), CFCs (13%), ozone (7%) and nitrous oxide (6%).
Term
Carbon to Nitrogen ratio (C/N)
Definition

The ratio of carbon atoms to nitrogen atoms. The lower this ratio is (more nitrogen), the faster things decompose. Microbes need 8 carbons for every 1 nitrogen. Residues with ratios bigger than 24:1 cause them to have to scavenge for nitrogen.

Saw dust has a very high ratio. Sewage has a very low ratio.

As decomposition progresses the ratio decreases (carbon is released into the atmosphere) and soluble nitrogen goes up. When the ratio is high to begin with there is a soluble nitrate depression period.

Term
Aridsol
Definition
Dry soil
Term
Molisol
Definition
Dry organic soil
Term
Histosol
Definition
Moist organic soil
Term
Temperature, moisture and soil carbon patterns in the US
Definition

Temperature increases to the south

Moisture increases to the east

Soil carbon increases north and east

Term
Fertilizer
Definition
Nutrients added to the soil. It increases plant growth. One Dutch saying is "Fertilizer is good for the father but bad for the sons". It causes more CO2 to be brought in from the air (increased photosynthesis), but it stimulates soil micromes whose appetite outweighs the benefit of crop residues: nitrogen is then broken down faster than plants can take up.
Term
Resilience
Definition
The ability of a crop to mitigate, adapt, and recover from environmental stresses such as soil moisture stress. They can sustain yield increase even through weather extremes.
Term
Nitrogen
Definition

An element essential for plants. It has many forms including atmospheric nitrogen, nitrite, nitrate, ammonium, and nitrous oxide. It is in chlorophyll, hormones, enymes, proteins, DNA, roots; everywhere in the plant. Too little or too much can harm plants. It can be harmful to the environment.

You can detect the nitrogen levels in a plant based on how green the leaves are using reflectants or by testing for chlorophyll levels.

Term
Nitrogen fertilzer
Definition
It is made with the Haber-Bosch process. It is expensive. It is 22% of a farm's expenses. All plants can use N fertilizer, whereas not all plants can use rhizobium bacteria. It highly increases yields. There are roughly 6 times the returns for its price in agriculture.
Term
Atmospheric nitrogen (N2)
Definition
The form nitrogen takes in the air. 78% of the atmosphere is this. It can be fixed by biological fixation with legumes or by the Haber-Bosch process. It takes a lot of energy to split the molecule. Its bond is extremely strong. 16 ATP are required in biological fixation.
Term
Nitrogen-fixing bacteria
Definition
A soil bacteria which turns atmospheric nitrogen into nitrites and/or nitrates. They may live in the root nodules of legumes. They use the enzyme nitrogenase to fix nitrogen. The process requries 16 ATP. They get oxygen from leghemoglobin and eat sugars and organic acids provided by the legume.
Term
Legume
Definition
A plant which forms root nodules where nitrogen-fixing bacteria are housed. It gives the bacteria sugars, organic acids, and leghemoglobin in return for nitrate. They release NO, but they are still more ecologically friendly than the Haber-Bosch process. They are less efficient as cereal crops at capturing soluble nitrogen.
Term
Root nodule
Definition
A node in the root of a legume where nitrogen-fixing bacteria are housed. Chemicals are released by the plant and bacteria so that the bacteria can infect a root hair. It engorges and the bacteria form bacteroids which recieve oxygen through leghemoglobin.
Term
Leghemoglobin
Definition
An oxygen carrier in legumes which takes oxygen to the nitrogen fixing bacteria that live in root nodules. The bacteria breath oxygen, but oxygen slows the nitrogen fixing process. It buffers the amount of oxygen to optimize nitrogen fixation.
Term
Rhizobial inoculant
Definition
A treatment given to soil to increase the numbers of certain nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria. This enhances the growth of legumes.
Term
Ammonifying bacteria
Definition
A decomposer which releases ammonia.
Term
Nitrifying bacteria
Definition
Soil bacteria which turn ammonia into nitrates. Nitrification inhibitors can be used to slow this process up to twice as long.
Term
Denitrifying bacteria
Definition
Soil bacteria which turns nitrates into atmospheric nitrogen.
Term
Urea
Definition
A nitrogen-containing compound which must be first converted into ammonium before it can be available to plants. CO is released and pH increases in this process.
Term
Ammonium (NH3)
Definition
A nitrogen compound. It fixes to clay and minerals; it is immobile in the oil. Usable by plants but roots must grow towards it. Nitrifying bacteria turn it into nitrate. It is toxic to plants and must be turned to protein immediately.
Term
Nitrate
Definition
A nitrogen compound. It is an ion and dissolves in water. It is highly mobile in soil. It can easily be leached away. Nitrifying bacteria make it from ammonia and denitrifying bacteria turn it into atmospheric nitrogen. It causes eutrophication and algal blooms as well as methaemoglobinemia.
Term
Nitrous oxide (NO)
Definition
A greenhouse gas. It is 310 times worse than CO2. It accounts for 6% of greenhouse absorption. Cropland releases 69% of it. Legumes release it.
Term
Methaemoglobinemia
Definition
A disease caused by drinking water with high amounts of nitrates in it. It s like eutrophication but in your blood.
Term
Indigenous soil nitrogen (IN)
Definition
Nitrogen that stays in the soil. It is important to determine how much there is before adding N fertilizer to the soil.
Term
Corn production
Definition
In the US 20% to 25% of farmers monocrop this crop. It requires 6 million liters of water for 9 tonnes of yield. The soil has 4,000 kg/ha of indigenous nitrogen; 2 to 6% is taken up in harvest. Growing season is from May to October.
Term
Physiological nitrogen efficiency (PEN)
Definition
The grain yield per unit of nitrogen accumulaion in the aboveground biomass. How much grain with one unit of nitrogen taken up.
Term
C4 plant
Definition
Have higher nitrogen efficiency than C3 plants.
Term
C3 plant
Definition
Has a lower nitrogen efficiency than C4 plants, but has lower nitrogen concentration in the grain, which makes up for it.
Term
Soil texture
Definition
A determinant in the fate of nitrogen in the soil. Coarser soil has less plant uptake, less indigenous nitrogen, more leaching, but less denitrification.
Term
Nitrification inhibitors
Definition
Chemicals that slow or delay the nitrification process be killing or interfering with nitrosomonas bacteria. Nitrate is produced from ammonia slower and there is less lost to leaching or denitrifying bacteria.
Term
International Plant Nutrition Institute (IPNI)
Definition
An organization which stresses the 4 Rs and supports best managemet practices as well as environmental, social, and economic stewardship.
Term
The 4 Rs of fertilization
Definition

Right source

Right rate

Right time

Right place

Term
Water
Definition
An increasingly scarce resource due to climate change. It is necessary for all life. It has competition for other uses, and it comes with unpredictable precipitation. It is polluted. Rivers and groundwater are being depleted. By 2030 demand may exceed supplies by up to 40% and 47% of the world will live in water stressed areas.
Term
Biofuel
Definition
Fuel made from plant matter, usually corn. It takes 1000 L of water to make 1 kg; 250 times that to make a kg of coal. Can be ethanol, or burning biomass directly. Produce electrcity or methane.
Term
Teff
Definition
A crop popular in Ethiopia. It has very low water needs. It was not effected by the Green Revolution and still suffers from lodging. Because of this rice has been introduced in Ethiopia but rice has much higher water needs.
Term
Water cycle
Definition

Precipitation brings water to the soil, where it evaporates or is transpirated through plants, or runs off into surface water where it evaporates and becomes precipitation again. Soil is a reservoir for water.

This cycle effects plant residues, soil organic mater, and the mineralizationo rate of ammonia to nitrates.

Term
Xylem
Definition
The tubes through which water is brought from the roots to the top of the plant. Root pressure and water's cohesiveness, combined with water transpiring from leaves causes it to go up.
Term
Evapotranspiration
Definition
The combination of soil evaporation and plant transpiration. It is hard to determine how much of the moisture is lost through either of these. Its levels depend on soil moisture, plant water status, climatic conditions, time of year, radiation, temperature, CO2, canopy development, planting density, and plant physiology (root depth, length of life cycle, growing period, C3/C4). Cold air causes increased transpiration. Mulches, and not tilling decrease evaporation.
Term
Water Use
Definition
= Rainfall - Losses from soil evaporation and non-crop species
Term
Transpiration
Definition
Water leaving a plant through the stomata on its leaves.
Term
Available soil moisture
Definition
Depends on the weather, water inflitration and retention, plant rooting characteristics, the depth of the water table, root channels, microbial activity, and the soils water capacity. The plant doesn't use all the water available due to physical stress, chemicals, root diseases or pests, or poor crop rotation.
Term
Soil water capacity
Definition
Depends on the soil texture, structure, compaction, depth, and organic matter.
Term
Plant water stress
Definition

Occurs when the available soil moisture is less than the crop's water requirements. The plant deals with this by:

1. Escaping drought period: crop duration, increase time to flowering.

2. Recovering from drought: new productive tillers.

3. Avoid low water status: extract more water from soil, constrict stomata.

4. Tolerate drought: plant mechanisms, increase WUE, osmotic adjustment, cell protection.

Term
Water Use Efficincy (WUE)
Definition
The dry matter yield in kg divided by the water transpired from the plants in m3.
Term
Yield
Definition
Water use x (WUE) x (HI)
Term
Roots
Definition

The underground part of a plant which takes up water and nutrients. The less roots, the less water uptake, but roots are a carbon sink, lessening photosynthesis.

Restricted root growth may be due to physical reasons (soil compaction), chemicals (acidity, boron, aluminium), biological (diseases, insects, nematodes), or poor rotations.

To increase root growth, improve soil structure (tillage), soil organic matter, root channels, and microbial activity.

Term
Soil Evaporation
Definition
The evaportation of water from the soil. Decreases water availability to plants. To lessen it, co-ordinate planting with expected rainfall, take into account plant density, ferilizer use, soil compaction, don't use tillage, use mulches (vegetative, paper, plastic), and crop residues.
Term
Australia
Definition
Has bred wheat to have deeper and fewer roots, to make more efficient water uptake. Overall rainfall has dropped, but yields have actually increased.
Term
Agroecology
Definition

Strives to meet environmental as well as productive goals in agriculture. Applies ecological concepts to design and manage sustainable agroecosystems. Ensure adequate plant nutrition, water supply, and protection from diseases and pests.

Use crop rotations, cover crops, intercropping, legumes, green manure, reduced tillage, mulches, residue return, manure, composts, biosolids, natural enemies, wildlife refuges, soil and water conservation, resiliance to stresses, reduced erosion, maintained fertility, and decreased chemical inputs.

Term
Environmental Goals
Definition
Lessen GHG emissions, reduce loss of biodiversity and habitats, decrease unsustainable water withdrawal, and decrease pollution. The government, the media, consumers, and retailers want these goals.
Term
Productivity Goals
Definition
Give sufficient food access and security to the world.
Term
Yield Gap
Definition
The difference between what a crop could be producing and what it is actually producing. This gap can be filled with irrigation, fertilizers, GMOs, and maybe organic agriculture.
Term
4 Basic Agroecological Principles
Definition

1. Enhance diversity

2. Promote biological interactions and synergisms

3. Sustain soil organic matter levels and soil biotic activity

4. Maintain soil cover. 30% of land covered 100% of the time.

Term
Genetically Modified Organism (GMO)
Definition

An organism whose genes have been altered. GMO crops have traits beneficial to agriculture. They have nothing to do with organic agriculture and may be used in organic systems.

Bt corn, Bt cotton, Golden Rice, Roundup Ready.

Term
George Morris
Definition
A cattle feeder and cash crop-farmer originally from Alberta then from Merlin, ON. Became a millionaire. The president of the CCA. He introduced the Canadian live cattle grading system. A member of the Canadian Agricultural Hall of Fame.
Term
George Morris Centre
Definition
A Canadian economic agri-food research institute. Independent financially, structurally, and in research; this makes it not restricted like a government institute might be. It looks at market analysis, economic policy, agribusiness strategy, economics of food, health, and sustainability.
Term
Agricultural Issues
Definition
According to a poll, the most important issues to Canadians are food safety, health of Canadians, affordability of food, the environment, and animal welfare.
Term
Sustainability
Definition

It can mean something different depending on your background. Industrial agriculture may be sustainable, and local foods are not necessarily sustainable. Some deffinitions:

- A rejection of the industrial approach to food production from the 20th century.

-Embracing organic, free-range, low-input, holistic, biodynami systems.

-Local foods

-Animal welfare

-Using natural resources, knowledge, and science to produce safe, nutritious products while being economically, environmentally, and socially responsible.

-Doing what you have always done, pretending it is a new idea.

-Efficient production of high quality products while improving the environment, social, and economic conditions for farmers, employees, and communities, while safeguarding health and welfare of farmed species.

Term
3 Pillars of Sustainability
Definition

1. Environment: protect the natural resources

2. Social: social relations between farmers and rural communities, ensuring and creating employment and animal welfare.

3. Economic: ensure economic viability of farming systems at a local level.

Term
5 Principples of Sustainable Food
Definition

1. Food Safety

2. Animal Health and Welfare

3. Environment

4. Economics and Food Affordability

5. Health and Safety

Term
Food Certification Programs
Definition

There are no certification programs for holistically grown foods. They are usually voluntary, with a logo on the product. Farmer Unions may be against certification. They can be customer developed (Tesco's Nurture), farm developed (GlobalGAP), attribute specific (Certified Humane), country specific (UK's Red Tractor), or commodity specific (Certified Greenhouse).

Most are a questionnaire with yes/no questions, or rating extent of various actions.

Problems with them are that they are expensive, few auditors, constanly changing requests, market access barriers, and some farms can't get them due to not enough man power to deal with the bureaucracy.

Term
Canadian Agri-Food Initiatives
Definition

-Grain Farmers of Ontario

-Pulse Canada

-Grains Roundtable

-Dairy Farmers of Canada

-Canola Council of Canada

-Local Food Plus

-Environmental Farm Plan

Term
Environmental Farm Plan (EFP)
Definition
A farmer-developed educational tool for understanding on-farm environmental improvements. A self-administered questionnaire. Financial support for BMPs. Diagnoses environmental risks. Doesn't address animal welfare, labour standards, or third party verification.
Term
Canadian Pork Exports
Definition
Canada is a world player in pork exports. Exports mainly to the US, but a lot to Russia. Recently Russia has banned ractopomine, a feed additive for muscle growth in hogs. This has lessened exports to Russia.
Term
German Agriculture
Definition
Germany had a food scandal in the late 1990s. Since 2000 farms have converted to organic, but forced to switch back because of fewer profits.
Term
Opossums
Definition
Their population is creeping northward.
Term
Agroforestry
Definition
An integration of trees with other crops or livestock spatially or temporally. Has environmental, ecological, economical, and social benefits and is sustainable. The Native Americans used it before colonization. Increases good insect populations and decreases bad insect populations. Increase in earthworm populations. Trees slow the travelling of weeds. Provide a habitat for birds which control pest populations. Halve leaching.
Term
Forest Farming Systems
Definition
Farming trees for commodities: timber, wood fuel, maple syrup, Christmas trees, ginseng, shiitake mushrooms, pharmaceuticals.
Term
Windbreak Systems
Definition
Planting trees as a windbreak around fields to slow erosion. Optimal coverage is 40% porous. Too little pores and it is useless. Too much pores and there is no soil erosion protection.
Term
Silvopastoral Systems
Definition
Integrading trees with livestock pasture. Use shade tolerant forages. Animal welfare increased; provide animals with shade. Happy animals produce less methane. Carbon sequestering is 3 times that of a monoculture pasture.
Term
Integrated Riprian Management System
Definition
Planting trees on the banks of rivers and streams. Prevents livestock from defecating in the water, spreading E. coli. Good trees are oak, walnut, and ash. Reduce radiation hitting water. Litterfall provides good, slow, organic nutrients to the water. Increase fish populations.
Term
Bioenergy Systems
Definition
Growing trees for fuel. Willows grow very quickly. A much better fuel crop than corn; less inputs, more outputs.
Term
Ginseng
Definition
A crop that requires shade. Ginseng grown under tree cover can sell for more than ginseng grown under a cover.
Term
Radiata pine
Definition
A timber crop integrated with sheep in New Zealand. The trees must be pruned, and the sheep can then eat the pruned needles.
Term
Cork oak
Definition
A timer crop used for bottle corks. Good to intercrop with hogs because hogs love acorns.
Term
Goat
Definition
Livestock which are not good for integrating with trees. They will devour all the leaves on the tree, killing it.
Term
Cattle
Definition
A big producer of CO2. Sometimes they are vilified as the cause of global warming. The feed to weight gain ratio is 6.5:1. When integrating this livestock with tree saplings, they will become curious and damage the young trees. To avoid this, spread their manure on or near the trees and they will avoid them.
Term
Sheep
Definition

This livestock can effectively weed an area by eating all the weeds.

They can graze alongside cattle. The cattle protect them and provide shade. They emit less greenhouse gases than steers. They can be produced in NZ and shipped to UK emiting less GHG than if it were local UK.

Their gestation period is 5 months. Energy requirements of a pregnant ewe can be matched to the growth curve of forages. Flushing (3 weeks) and pregnancy periods cannot be changed, but lactation and maintenance can be controlled to time feed requirements.

Term
Poultry
Definition
The feed to weight gain ratio of a broiler is 2.5:1, and for a turkey it is 2.6:1. This livestock can effectively weed an area by eating all the weeds. A moveable enclosure contraption can be used.
Term
Washington Creek
Definition
A creek which benefited greatly from an integrated riparian management system. Fish populations went up.
Term
Juglone
Definition
A chemical produced by black walnut trees which is toxic to dicots. The trees don't produce enough to be very harmful to crops, but will decrease yields.
Term
Fibre
Definition

Biomass fibre is used to make plywood, concrete fibres, and paper.

If there is excess fibre in a cattle's diet, it produces greenhouse gasses. There are feed additives to try and minimize this methane roduction, and maximize instead VHA production.

Term
Corn residues
Definition
Corn stover and cobs. Corn has a 50% HI, so half its weight is in residues. Cobs don't store well because of high moisture content.
Term
Wheat straw
Definition
Can be used for livestock bedding or mushroom production. When used for bedding the nutrients return to the field as manure.
Term
Biomass
Definition
A crops mass. Some species are grown just for biomass as fibre or fuel. Such species are hemp, maize, sorghum, willow, poplar, miscanthus, and switchgrass. Impacts of growing such speceis depend on whether it is annual or perennial, yield potential, inputs, type of plant being displaced, and land type.
Term
Miscanthus
Definition
A group of grasses native to Asia. Grown for biomass. A sterile C4 warm-season grass. Propagated vegetatively. Each plant is exactly the same. A perennial. Produces 20 to 26 tonnes/ha/year. Requires only 60 kg/ha N.
Term
Switchgrass
Definition
A perennial grass grown for biomass.
Term
Ruminant
Definition
Animals with 4 stomachs. Cattle, sheep, goats. They have enzymes in their guts which allow them to eat things that humans cannot. They produce milk and meat. Their manure has microbes which stimulate the soil. They have a disadvantage in terms of feed conversion in comparison to monogastrics or cold-blooded animals.
Term
The 5 Fs of farmland
Definition
Food, Feed, Fibre, Fuel, and Fun
Term
Soybean
Definition
When solitary a soybean plant is quite tall. In a crop, it is a short plant.
Term
Feed Conversion Ratio (FCR/F:G)
Definition
The mass of total dry feed divided by the anima's final body mass. Depends on the animal's digestive anatomy. It has been decreasing since the turn of the 20th century due to genetic improvement. It went from 6:1 to 2:1 for chickens. It can't get much better than that. The reason for this is because we started feeding animals human foods rather than animal feeds. Smaller animals have better feed conversion, better genetic improvement, and are more prolific.
Term
Forage
Definition
The cheapest source of nutrients for ruminants for efficient meat and milk production. They improve soil aggregates, microbial activity, water holding capacity, and SOM. Decrease soil compction. Decrease erosion and leaching. Contribute to nitrogen. Provide feed, soil cover, carbon fixing, nutrients, and soil building. Has low energy content, high fibre. Causes slow weight gain in animals.
Term
Family farm
Definition
More likely to practice long-term erosion control practices.
Term
Vegetarianism
Definition
A diet lacking meat. Up to 3 times more people per ha can be supported on this diet, but much less perennials are used. Vegetarian diets with high fat consumption need more land than meat diets with moderate fat consumption.
Term
Management intensive grazing
Definition

A management system for grazing with multiple paddocks which are grazed and then allowed to recover. Growth has an S-shaped curve. Depending on the size of the herd, about 20 paddocks will be needed, an acre each. Movable electric (solar powered) fences can be used. Water must be provided for the grazers.

Despite what you might think, intensive management takes up less time for the farmer than a tie-stall barn. There is high production per acre, low biodiversity and resiliance.

Term
Management extensize grazing
Definition

A management system for grazing where the livestock are allowed to graze on the same very large field for the entire season. More tractor traffic, so denser soil. There is low production per acre, and high biodiversity and resiliance.

Its ok to let cattle out a few days before the forage is fully ready. They won't eat it, they will be playing.

Term
Recovery Period (RP)
Definition
The time it takes for a paddock to recover from being grazed. It varies with plant, region, stocking density, and time of year. Novia Socia has the fastest RP. RP is 2 weeks in the early summer, but slows to 6 weeks by late summer. If RP is too short, there is too little feed. If RP is too long, there is too much fibre in the feed, and growth slows, making the system inefficient.
Term
Period of stay
Definition
The time a group of animals occupy a paddock. Must be short enough to prevent overgrazing.
Term
Forage allowance
Definition
The total forage available, measured from ground level, often with  raising plate meter.
Term
Raising plate meter
Definition
A tool used to measure forage allowance. It is simply a measuring stick with a plate that drops down, measuring the height and density of the grass.s
Term
Net forage
Definition
The amount of forage tht can be harvested by grazers or machine.
Term
Stocking rate
Definition
The numer of animals per hectare per season.
Term
Stocking density
Definition
The number of animals per hectare per specified period.
Term
TDN
Definition
Total Digestible Nutrients
Term
RHA
Definition
Rolling Herd Average
Term
Shade
Definition
In grazing systems, animals crave shade. Often all the cattle will huddle under the one tree in a field, destroying the ground near the tree with overgrazing and manure. A solution to this is more dispersed trees, or grazing at night.
Term
Yellow fat
Definition
A phenomenon in beef thought to be caused by grazing on grass, but actually it is due to old cattle.
Term
Pasture vs. Confined
Definition
Pasturing cattle increases soil carbon and nitrogen efficiency, and lowers erosion, leaching, and greenhouse gas emissions. The cattle are healthier, but weight gain is slower. Average costs are less in a pasture.
Term
Walmart
Definition
Retails 20% of milk in the US. Launched a self-made Sustainability Index for its producers but didn't get any third-party evaluation. Their GHG emissions went down, but no-one cares, they want even more improvement.
Term
Animal protein
Definition
The main reason for raising livestock. Animal protein (from meat, eggs, or milk) is high quality for muscle building.
Term
Protein envy
Definition
A phenomenon where vegetarians pretend to eat animal protein. Soy milk, veggie burgers.
Term
Lamb
Definition
The feed to weight gain ratio is 4.0:1. New Zealand and Australia are actually not high up in lamb prouction. China, the US, and the EU are. Lamb prices fluctuate a lot. You can get New Zealand lamb in the UK for less GHG emissions than UK lamb!
Term
Argentina
Definition
A huge consumer of meat and beef.
Term
Fish
Definition
The feed to weight gain ratio is 1.0:1, but fish feed is expensive. Wild fish are caught from lakes and oceans. When the fish runs out they fish deeper, longer, or farther away. In the 80s cod socks collapsed. Fish is a leading source of protein. It is popular in poorer countries.
Term
Aquaculture
Definition
The fastest growing sector. In 2013 it overtook beef as the leading producer of protein. By 2012 half of fish eaten were from aquaculture. It is becoming more sustainable. In Canada we farm salmon, oysters, trout, and mussels. There is demand for more fish, and Canada has the means to expand fish production, but doesn't because of the environment. It improves economy of rural and coastal communities. Huge domestic and international markets.
Term
Rout trout
Definition
We farm this fish because we have had all the techniques for 100 years, the trout has domesticated traits, we know its nutritional needs, and you can buy feed from suppliers. The water temperature needs for this fish are perfect in Canada. There is an established market for this fish. It is native to Canada, so it doesn't pose risk to the ecology.
Term
Canada
Definition
In Canada we generally eat an ethnocentrically European diet. There is a corresponding demand for food products. This shapes our production systems. This country has 20% of the world's freshwater, plentiful biophysical resources, a developed culture and technology.
Term
Rules
Definition

1. If there is no rule against it, it is allowed.

2. If nobody follows the rule, it is not a rule, and cannot be enforced.

This is why a Social Licnce to Operate becomes important.

Term
Public attitude
Definition
Changes over time. This effects consumer choices, government regulations, environmental issues, animal welfare, and relative acceptance of livestock industries. The media is upset about animal welfare issues such as battery cages, the fur industry, and sow gestation crates. "Factory farm" is a term used. The public comes into contact with animal production when they see animal trucks.
Term
Pain control
Definition
Now used in all castrations, dehornings, and brandings. Litocane is used for dehornings voluntarily. It is diffucult, but not impossible to dehorn an animal without litocane.
Term
Immunocastration
Definition
Castration via a series of injections.
Term
National Farm Animal Care Counsil
Definition
Looks at industries, gropus, processors, enforcement, restaurants and food services, CFIA, researchers, transporters, retail, and the government. Require that cattle producers take promt steps when a cattle shows signs of heat or cold stress. Asks that producers take a course on cattle handling techniques.
Term
Animal shipping
Definition
The public comes into contact with animal production when they see animals being shipped. There are now rules about how and when you can ship an animal. They reduced the maximum feed and water intervals and reduced the maximum loading density. There are no North American studies on the effects of loading density.
Term
Social Licence to Operate
Definition
Depeds on public policy, funding, regulations, and market signals. It differs between livestock species and it applies to animal welfare and environmental issues.
Term
Nutrient Heirarchy
Definition

A ranking of importance of nutrients based on how long an animal can survive without them.

1. Oxygen

2. Water

3. Carbohydrates

4. Protein

5. Vitamins

6. Minerals

7. Fat

Term
Star system
Definition
A timing system where a ewe has 5 lambs in 3 years.
Term
DTM
Definition
Days to Market
Term
Grain
Definition
Has high energy and low fibre. Causes fast weight gain in animals.
Term
Protein
Definition
When a cattle has excess protein in the diet, the manure is rich in nitrogen.
Term
Phosphorous
Definition
An essential nutrient in animals as well as plants. Livestock diets are supplemented with it. It is the 3rd most expensive nutrient. When there is excess phosphorous in a cattle's diet, the manure is rich in phosphorous. This can cause algal blooms. Reducing extra P in diets can reduce this as well as saving money.
Term
Monogastric
Definition
Animals with one stomach. Can eat high-fibre foods, starches, and sugars. Digests with its own enzymes. Require a high-protein diet unless they practice copography. Superior feed efficiency per unit weight of feed. Have cloven hooves.
Term
Ruminant
Definition
An animal with digestive compartments prior to the stomach. Requires a high-fibre diet (grasses). Low tolerance for starches and sugars. Ferments feed with micro-organisms that live in its rumen. Can tolerate a low-protein diet; gets its protein from its micro-organisms. Lower feed efficiency, but can survive on low quality feeds. Grain or sugar overload can be very bad for a ruminant.
Term
Rumen
Definition
The compartment in a ruminant where fermentation occurs. Produces methane, carbon dioxide, and VFAs.
Term
Copography
Definition
Eating its own feces. Rabbits practice this to get protein from the micro-organisms. Rabbits get the benefit of both monogastric and ruminant-style digestion.
Term
Maintenance feed
Definition
The amount of feed an animal needs just to maintain life. No weight gain occurs at this level. This is why an animal is rushed through a production system. The longer it is kept alive, the more feed is wasted on maintenance.
Term
Lean growth
Definition
Muscle growth. More F:G efficient than fat growth.
Term
Fat growth
Definition
Development of fat in an animal. Less F:G efficient than lean growth. Fat is more energy dense. When an animal begins fat growth, its F:G drops. This is called "stalling out".
Term
Luxury Consumption
Definition
Consumption over the recommended feed rates of an animal. Results not in weight gain, but in development of abnormally large organs, such as the liver.
Term
Veal
Definition
The feed to weight gain ratio is 5.0:1.
Term
Pig
Definition
The feed to weight gain ratio is 3.5:1.
Term
NPC
Definition
The table that shows the nutritional needs of a livestock species. Changes over time with animal's age, genetics, stage of production, the environment, and the breeding of plants (changes nutritional content).
Term
Pytate
Definition
The form in which phosphorous is found in grains, cereals, and many by-products. The enzyme phytase is needed to digest it. Ruminants have this enzyme via rumen microbes. Monogastrics lack it and require inorganic phosphorous, unles they are a phytase pig.
Term
Phytase pig
Definition
A GMO pig that produced phytase and is able to digest phytate.
Term
r2
Definition
A measure of how well a line fits a set of data. The maximum value is 1.
Term
Rainbow trout
Definition
A popular fish to farm. It has well established culturing techniques, is domesticated, and its nutritional requirements are well-defined. There is commercial feed available. Water temperature needs are identical to water in Canada.
Term
Atlantic salmon
Definition
Domesticated fish breed. Easy to raise in aquaculture.
Term
Ova
Definition
The life stage in fish production where the fish are eggs. Bought from commercial hatcheries. Broods are selected for breeding. They hatch in 30 to 100 days, depending on species.
Term
Sac fry
Definition
The life period in fish production after hatching where the fish still has a yolk sac attached to it for nutrients. Sac stays attached for 60 days.
Term
Fingerling
Definition
The stage in fish production following sac fry stage. As soon as sac falls off, the fish is hungry and will eat anything. The fish starts off small, but begins to grow. It must be moved to a larger tank/cage when it reaches 10 to 20 grams. After 12 to 16 months it is harvested at 0.9 to 1.5 kg. Two 8 or 12 ounce fillets are harvested per fish.
Term
Pond culture
Definition
Aquaculture in a pond. Water must be oxidized. Low production, mostly niche marketing. Labour intensive. Problem with predators.
Term
Eel
Definition
Cannot farm eel, they won't breed in captivity
Term
Salmonid
Definition
Any salmon or trout species.
Term
Raceway culture
Definition
A long rectangular tank for aquacultre. Not labour intensive; easy to manage.
Term
Circular tank culture
Definition
A circular tank for aquaculture. Fish like it and they have a better feed conversion ratio. They swim in a circle. Hard to manage.
Term
Cage culture
Definition
A form of aquaculture with a floating cage. Low operating cost, energy efficient, low pumping costs. Low environmental impacts. Manure recvery and removal. Ease of operation and management. Can be effected by the weather. Flexible design. Needs to be large to be economical. Can control water temperature using hypolimnions.
Term
Hypolimnion
Definition
A temperature difference between depth in water. No oxygen exchange between the two layers.
Term
Aquapod
Definition
A fully submerged cage for aquaculture. Low maintenance. Not effected by the weather.
Term
Experimental Lakes Area
Definition
Established in 1968. Controlled experiments in lakes. Studied how aquaculture would effect a lake, and it improved biodiversity and wild fish populations with no negative impacts. Removal of aquaculture caused things to go back to normal. Manure on the bottom of the lake is nutrient-rich. Invertebrates eat it, then fish eat invertebrates.
Term
Aquaponics
Definition
A perfect nutrient-recycling sustainable agriculture method. Fish and plants are grown together in a hydroponic system. The only input is fish feed. Plants use nutrients in fish mnure, cleaning water for re-use by fish. Not sterile, like hydroponics.
Term
Great Lakes
Definition
Totally ruined by invasive species introduced by foreign balast tankers. Upper lakes are nutrient poor and the lower lakes are so nutrient rich they have algal blooms.
Term
Milk
Definition
It is more feed efficient to produce milk than beef.
Term
Carbon age
Definition
Carbon from fossil fuels are millions of years older than carbon released from burning plants or from animals.
Term
Eructation
Definition
Cow "belching". The cow inhales the methane and uses it to make VHAs before exhaling it.
Term
Animal breeds
Definition
In Europe every village has its own livestock breeds. Preserving these breeds is not necessary to maintaining good genetics. Most breeds are just mixes of other breeds. Just giving a breed a name doesn't make it genetically unique.
Term
Affluence
Definition
Globally, the more affluence, the more meat consumption
Term
Indonesia
Definition

The 4th most populated country. Almost entirely cities. No welfare or retirement plans. Meat consumption popular with richer people. 

Mixed aquaculture and rice or duck production requires expertise, land, and resources. Not everyone can do it. 

Catfish are produced in a hole in the ground. 

Term
Rendering
Definition

Only a half of the animal is turned into meat. The other half, the offal, is rendered into other products, including animal feeds. Need to be careful of pathogens. 

In the olden days, all of the animal was used.

Term
Nutrient management
Definition
The management of nutrients, with agronomic and environmental considerations.
Term
Manure Application
Definition

Must be fine tuned, using testing, calibration, and planning. The 4 Rs must be considered. Testing must be done regularily, after aggitation to be accurate. If the farmer doesn't know the nutrient availability, they will over-apply it.

Manure affects not only crops, but soil biota as well. It can be applied by surface banding, shallow inection, or deep injection. Deep injection can cause N loss through leaching. Manure needs breakdown time before N release, but fall application can cause leaching over the winter. The more spread out, the better manure breakdown.

Term
Physical aspects of soil
Definition
Soil strucutre and compaction. Compacted soil has poor water infiltration. This effects biological aspects of the soil. Type of tire used on tractors effects soil compaction.
Term
Chemical aspects of soil.
Definition
pH, macro and micro nutrients. Soil tests can measure the nutrients available. pH effects the nutrients' availability. Nutrients effect the biological factors of the soil.
Term
Biological aspects of soil
Definition
Organic matter, soil life (earthworms, micro-organisms). Effect both chemical and physical aspects of soil.
Term
SOM sources
Definition
Crop residues, cover crops, manure, biosolids, biosolid pellets, N-viro, biochar, digestate, and compost.
Term
Manure
Definition
Can be liquid or solid. Composition of manure varies with type, livestock, stage of growth of livestock, rations, bedding material, and storage method. C:N ratio varies. If the C:N ratio is too high, microbes will take N from the soil; opposite of what the farmer wants. Low in nitrates, but high in ammonium. Ammonia volatization is highest on hot, dry, windy days on bare soil. Manure breaks down fastes in warm, wet, and high surface area situations.
Term
Liquid manure
Definition
The nitrogen is immediately available. High in potassium. Better to apply in the spring. Takes less time to break down.
Term
Solid manure
Definition
The nitrogen is released slowly. High in phosphorous. Better to apply in the summer. Takes more time to break down.
Term
Soil conductivity
Definition
An indicator of salt levels in soil. If it is over 4, can result in root burn with symptoms of water deprivation.
Term
Tire choice
Definition
The type of tires on tractors effects the soil compaction. Radical tires are better than Bias Ply tires.
Term
Cover crop
Definition
A crop used as ground cover. When paired with manure application, it can cause excellent N use. Supplies SOM and helps soil biota. Increased soil health.
Term
NMAN3
Definition
Nutrient management software. Used to achieve soil balance. Has soil maps. Ontario-specific. Records plans vs. actual. Calculates costs. Calculates long-term contributions to soil.
Term
Nutrient Management Plan (NMP)
Definition
A working document and management tool used to identify how land-applied nutrients and soil fertility are used to meet crop needs. Achieve optimal yields, manage input costs, and protect soil and water resources.
Term
Non Agriculture Sourced Material
Definition
Material used for fertilizer that doesn't come from agricultural activites. Biosolids.
Term
Red clover
Definition
A perfect cover-crop for corn. When corn needs N, red clover provides it with perfect timing.
Term
Hydrological soil groups
Definition
Based on how quickly water can move through a soil. Sandy soil has faster movement, risk of leaching, and clay soil has slower movement, risk of runoff.
Term
Insect production
Definition
Insect production uses less water and feed, emits less GHG and ammonia. High feed conversion (9 times that of beef). Fast growth rate, low risk of disease. Less animal welfare issues.
Term
Ecosystem stability
Definition

Dependent on

1. Resistance to stress

2. Resiliance to stress

3. Strength of links

Term
Tillage
Definition
Reverts succession to ground zero. Dramatically changes the ecosystem. Invites R selected species.
Term
Niche
Definition
Where you live, what you eat, et cetera. Agriculture is filled with open niches that may be filled by invaders.
Term
Stress "flip"
Definition
Sometimes ecological stress is so severe, the ecosystem "flips" to a completely different regime. The flip is reversible if the stress regresses.
Term
Ecosystem service
Definition
A natural process or propery that produces a measurable economic benefit to humans. Considered a public good.
Term
Live fence
Definition
Either a hedge or a fence with trees for posts. Boosts the ecosystem.
Term
Disturbance
Definition
A change in the energy dynamics of an ecosystem. Influences food web. Can be tillage, natural disaster, human activities. A selection pressure. Alters structures of populations. Impact depends on severity, frequency, type, size, timing, and intensity.
Term
Succession
Definition
Nature's recovery from disturbance. Individuals are replaced. There is primary succession and secondary succession.
Term
Primary succession
Definition
Succession that occurs if in disturbance soil and organic matter are removed, such as a volcanic eruption or mining. Early colonizers have small seeds, spread quickly; often they fix nitrogen. NPP and decomposition rates are often highest mid-succession.
Term
Secondary succession
Definition

Sucession that occurs if disturbance removes biomass, but not soil or organic matter; tillage, fire, hurricane. 

The seedbank is still present. Tillage only moves the seeds around. There is still some carbon and N cycling. Increased run-off (vegetation gone). High surface temperatures.

Term
Net Primary Productivity (NPP)
Definition
A measure of new plant material produced annually. In a succession it is highest mid-succession.
Term
Food web
Definition
A non-random web of food-chain associations. Disturbance can mess it up and it must reform.
Term
Allelopathy
Definition
Natural poisons made by plants as a defense mechanism. Walnut, rye, canola.
Supporting users have an ad free experience!