PROCESS DIAGRAM
Solar
Carbon energy
dioxide
Water
(precipitation)
Machines
Fertilization
Tillage
(working
the soil)
Seeding Harvesting
Irrigation
Weed and
insect control
Purchased inputs Farm production
Purchased inputs Farm production
Plant growth
(increase
in biomass)
Plant nutrient
minerals
(fertilizers)
Seed
Water (in
addition to
precipitation)
Agricultural
chemicals
(pesticides)
2
567
Packing
and
transportation
Food storage,
processing,
and
waste disposal
Fossil fuel
energy inputs
occur at
virtually every
stage of
agricultural
production.
1 3
4
Adapted from G.H. Heichel, “Agricultural Production and Energy Resources.”American Scientist
, Vol. 64 (January/February 1976).
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✓✓THE PLANNER
The Principal Types of Agriculture
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Contrast industrialized agriculture with
subsistence agriculture. - Describe three kinds of subsistence agriculture.
A
griculture can be roughly divided into two
types: industrialized agriculture
and subsistence agriculture. Most
farmers in highly developed coun-
tries and some in developing countries practice
high-input agriculture, or industrialized agricul-
ture. It relies on large inputs of capital and
energy (in the form of fossil fuels) to make and
run machinery, purchase seed, irrigate crops, and produce
agrochemicals such as commercial inorganic fertilizers and
pesticides (}ÕÀiÊ£{°Î). Industrialized agriculture pro-
duces high yields (the amount of food produced per unit
of land), which allows forests and other natural areas to
remain wild instead of being converted to agri-
cultural land. However, the productivity of
industrialized agriculture comes with costs, such
as soil degradation and increased pesticide resis-
tance in agricultural pests; we discuss these and
other problems later in the chapter (and in
Chapters 4 and 12).
industrialized
agriculture Modern
agricultural methods
that require large
capital inputs and less
land and labor than
traditional methods.
The Principal Types of Agriculture 353
Industrialized agriculture
requires a lot of capital. Why is it so expensive?
Think Critically