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3-1 ATB. What is desertification? Today: Discuss the presentations you will create over the next three days. Soil Peds. How sand, silt and clay are arranged Forms soil structure. 3-2 ATB. What is weathering? Today: Research!
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3-1 ATB • What is desertification? • Today: • Discuss the presentations you will create over the next three days.
Soil Peds • How sand, silt and clay are arranged • Forms soil structure
3-2 ATB • What is weathering? • Today: • Research! • Is your worksheet done for the class??? (I need them tomorrow, at the latest)
3-3 ATB • What was the dust bowl? • Today: • Last day of research
3-4 ATB • Is your presentation finished? • Today: • Finish presentations • Give me your worksheet / note outline
3-8 ATB • What is IPM? • Today: • Start presenting • I’ll need your rubric for grading your presentation
3-9 ATB • What are the positive benefits of no-till farming? What could be a negative? • Today: • Continue the presentations
3-10 ATB • Where do some carnivores begin eating large prey animals? • Today: • Continue with presentations
3-14 ATB • Which is the worst type of erosion? Splash, Rill or Sheet erosion? • Today: • Finish soil conserv and degradation • Start Tarek / Elliot presentation • Planet Earth…
3-15 ATB • What is the most effective irrigation method? • Today: • Continue with presentations
3-16 ATB • What is salinization? How does it occur? • Today: • Sir-Oly and J. Mutch present
3-17 ATB • What was one benefit and one problem with the green revolution? • Today: • Continue with presentations • Quiz Monday on the first 3 presentations
3-18 ATB • How long ago do we believe agriculture began? • Today: • Get Soil Samples • Lab Quiz Monday • Ch 9 Quiz Monday (Tarek & Elliot – presentation posted?)
Soil Lab • HOMEWORK: • Soil Samples • Find an area at your house that indicative of normal soil (IE, do not dig the soil out of a compost heap) • Dig at least 6 inches down (no more then 10 inches) • Get a a sandwich bag full of soil (write you name on the bag) • Read background on Soil Formation & Properties • Quiz on the reading Monday (so yes, two quizzes on Monday)
3-22 ATB • What was the green revolution? • Today: • Ch 9 quiz • Lab background quiz • Tomorrow – start soil lab
3-24 ATB - none • Soil Lab Today: • Get out your lab procedure • Get a piece of paper to make observations • 5 observations from mechanical weathering • 2 observations from the chemical weathering • Make the applicable observations for the Soil Texture and Soil Consistence activities • Do not spray each other with the spray bottles • Make sure everything is cleaned up before you leave
3-25 ATB • What is shaking the rock samples supposed to be simulating? • Today: • Finish the mechanical weathering section of the lab • Set up the chemical weathering portion of the lab
3-28 ATB • What is a monoculture? • Today: • Finish the chemical weather part of the lab
3-29 ATB • What were the three things that make up soil? • Today: • Testing soil types
3-30 ATB • What are some examples of problems caused by overgrazing? • Today: • Finish the last two presentations • Thursday – Finish soil lab
3-31 • What is aquaculture? What is one pro and one con? • Today: • Lab: • Finish “Determining Soil Consistence” • Set up the “Soil Organization”, but do not add the food coloring • Test – next week
4-1 ATB • Before agriculture, what was our primary means of obtaining food? • Today: • Test / study guide -- Wednesday • Finish your lab from yesterday. • Read the Article, “Fighting Over Food” • Create 5 questions that can be answered from the article • Create 2 “thinking” questions dealing with the article. (due before you leave) • People on Ffaablaah trip: • Get a review sheet – due when you get back. • Finish your lab questions – skip pages 15 & 16.
4-6 ATB • Even if no one cared about the dolphins being killed, what is dangerous about this? • Today: • Finish “The Cove” • Paragraph or two on your feelings / questions about the movie. (Ie: Is this okay? What about the mercury? Etc) • Work on your review sheet – Test Friday
4-7 ATB • What is bioaccumulation? • Today: • Labs due, article Q’s due, “The Cove” paragraph due • Review – any questions about the test? • Test / Study Guide - Tomorrow • Discuss GM foods in the “Viewpoints” packet
4-7 Assignment • Pg 259 • #2 • #8 • Pg 291 • #1 • #8
Article, “Fighting Over Food” • Create 6 questions that can be answered from the article • Answer: • Pg 24-25 in Viewpoints packet – Read • Which article do you find yourself siding with? Explain
Worksheet example • Page # you’re presenting • Term: • Term: • Term: • Term: • Term: • Extra Info:
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Questions… Get a slice of paper and answer the following… • What is no till farming? • What are soil horizons? List them • What is desertification? • What is weathering? • Name two factors that lead to the Dust Bowl. • What is IPM?
This lecture will help you understand: • The relationship between soils and agriculture • Major agricultural developments • The fundamentals of soil science • Causes and consequences of soil erosion and degradation • Principles of soil conservation
No-till agriculture in Southern Brazil • Southern Brazil’s climate and soils make for bountiful harvests • Repeated planting has diminished the productivity of the soil • Leaving crop residues on their fields after harvesting and planting “cover crops” reduced erosion, increased yields and cut costs • These no-till techniques have benefited everyone
Soil: the foundation for agriculture • Land devoted to agriculture covers 38% of Earth’s land surface • Agriculture = practice of raising crops and livestock for human use and consumption • Cropland = land used to raise plants for human use • Rangeland or pasture = land used for grazing livestock • Soil = a complex plant-supporting system consisting of disintegrated rock, organic matter, water, gases, nutrients, and microorganism • It is a renewable resource
Population and consumption degrades soil • Feeding the world’s rising human population requires changing our diet or increasing agricultural production • Land suitable for farming is running out • We must find ways to improve the efficiency of food production • Mismanaged agriculture turns grasslands into deserts; removes forests; diminishes biodiversity; and pollutes soil, air, and water • Fertile soil is blown and washed away
Millions of acres of cropland are lost each year We lose 5-7 million ha (12-17 million acres) of productive cropland annually
Soil degradation has many causes • Soil degradation results from deforestation, agriculture and overgrazing • Over the past 50 years, soil degradation has reduced global grain production by 13%
Agriculture arose 10,000 years ago • Agriculture was invented independently by different cultures • The earliest plant and animal domestication is from the “Fertile Crescent” of the Middle East • Wheat, barley, rye, peas, lentils, onions, goats, sheep
Traditional agriculture • Traditional agriculture = biologically powered agriculture, using human and animal muscle power • Subsistence agriculture = families produce only enough food for themselves • Intensive agriculture = produces excess food to sell • Uses animals, irrigation and fertilizer, but not fossil fuels
Industrialized agriculture is a recent phenomenon • Industrialized agriculture = using large-scale mechanization and fossil fuels to boost yields • Also uses pesticides, irrigation and fertilizers • Monocultures = uniform planting of a single crop • Green revolution = the use of new technology, crop varieties and farming practices introduced to developing countries • Increased yields • Created new problems and worsened old ones
Soil as a system • Soil consists of mineral matter, organic matter, air, and water • Dead and living microorganisms, and decaying material • Bacteria, algae, earthworms, insects, mammals, amphibians, and reptiles Since soil is composed of living and non-living matter, it is considered an ecosystem
Soil formation is slow and complex • Parent material = the base geologic material of soil • Lava, volcanic ash, rock, dunes • Bedrock = the continuous mass of solid rock comprising the Earth’s crust • Weathering = the physical, chemical, or biological processes that break down rocks to form soil • Physical (mechanical) = wind and rain, no chemical changes in the parent material • Chemical = substances chemically interact with parent material • Biological = organisms break down parent material
Other processes affect soil formation • Erosion = the dislodging and movement of soil by wind or water • Occurs when vegetation is absent • Biological activity includes deposition, decomposition, and accumulation of organic matter • Humus = a dark, spongy, crumbly mass of material formed by partial decomposition
A soil profile consists of horizons • Horizon = each layer of soil • Soil profile = the cross-section of soil as a whole • Up to six major horizons may occur in a soil profile • Topsoil = inorganic and organic material most nutritive for plants • Leaching = dissolved particles move down through horizons
Soils are characterized in many ways • Soils are classified based on color, texture, structure, and pH • Soil color = indicates its composition and fertility • Black or dark brown = rich in organic matter • Pale gray or white = indicates leaching • Soil texture = determined by the size of particles • From smallest to largest = clay, silt, sand • Loam = soil with an even mixture of the three • Influences how easy it is to cultivate and let air and water travel through the soil
Soil texture classification Silty soils with medium-size pores, or loamy soils with mixtures of pore sizes are best for plant growth and crop agriculture
Soil structure and pH • Soil structure = a measure of soil’s “clumpiness” • Large clumps can discourage plant roots • Repeated tilling compacts soil, decreasing its water-absorbing capabilities • Plowpan = a hard layer resulting from repeated plowing that resists water infiltration and root penetration • Soil pH = influences a soil’s ability to support plant growth • Soils that are too acidic or basic can kill plants
Cation exchange is vital for plant growth • Cation exchange = process that allows plants to gain nutrients • Negatively charged soils hold cations (positively charged ions) of calcium, magnesium, and potassium • Cation exchange capacity = a soil’s ability to hold cations, preventing them from leaching, thereby increasing their availability to plants • A useful measure of soil fertility • Greatest in fine soils