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Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5
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Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Dec 26, 2015

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Adrian Pierce
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Page 1: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides

Slap it!Survive the 5

Page 2: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are the first four letters in a soil profile from top to bottom??

• O, A, B, C

Page 3: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Which soil horizon has the decomposed organic material?

Page 4: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Which soil horizon is topsoil?

• A

Page 5: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is decomposed organic matter called in soil?

Page 6: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is the name for the rock below the soil?

Page 7: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are the three main sizes of soil particles in order from smallest to largest.

• Clay, Silt, Sand

Page 8: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

If you wanted a well drained soil which soil particle would you add to your soil?

• Sand

Page 9: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are the percentages of sand, silt, and clay at X?

Page 10: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are the percentages of sand, silt, and clay at X?

Page 11: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are the percentages of sand, silt, and clay at X?

Page 12: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Name three of the major inputs in industrialized agriculture.

• Inorganic Fertilizer• Pesticides• Machines (tractors, combines, etc.)

Page 13: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are two benefits of genetically modified organisms?

• Resist cold• Produce their own pesticides• Grow faster• Resist herbicides

Page 14: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are three ways foreign DNA can be introduced into cells?

• Gene gun – dna on gold shot into cell• Bacteria – invade host cell and introduce dna• Electricity – create tears in cell that allow dna

to enter.

Page 15: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are two concerns with GMO’s?

• Genetic Resistance• Breeding Superweeds• Seeds growing in unwanted places (like an

organic farmers field).

Page 16: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are the negatives of aquaculture?

Need to add antibiotics to reduce risk of disease.

Need high calorie fish food to feed fishNet energy loserPredators can get stuck in nets trying to eat fish.Fish waste creates a problem

Page 17: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What does annual mean?

• Once a year.

• Perennial means they are always there.

Page 18: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Give an example of an annual plant.

• Dandelions, wildflowers, etc.• Any plant that blooms, flowers, and dies in a

short life cycle.

Page 19: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Give an example of a perennial plant.

• Roses, blueberry bushes, shrubs, etc. • Any plant that lives year round.

Page 20: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Give an example of a chlorinated hydrocarbon.

• DDT, Aldrin, Dieldrin, PCB’s

Page 21: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What were the big negatives of chlorinated hydrocarbons?

• They persist for a long time• They bioaccumulate (because they are fat

soluble)

Page 22: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Are organophosphates and carbamates more or less toxic than chlorinated hydrocarbons

• More toxic

Page 23: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are two benefits from organophosphates and carbamates?

• They are less persistent• They do not bioaccumulate or biomagnify

Page 24: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Bioaccumulate or Biomagnify? Which one happens in an individual?

•Bioaccumulate

Page 25: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

I just sprayed an herbicide on my garden and everything died… I mistakenly used a

• Broad spectrum herbicide instead of a narrow spectrum herbicide.

Page 26: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is the pesticide treadmill?.

• Farmer uses pesticide and it works great. • Farmer uses again and it doesn’t

work as well.• Pests breed resistance.• More pesticides are needed and/or a

new pesticide is needed.

Page 27: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Give an example of biological control of pests?

• Ladybugs eating aphids• Cane toads eating cane grub (well… they

didn’t actually eat it)

Page 28: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Explain how you could use Integrated Pest Management to control mites in a strawberry field.

• Biological - Bring in a predatory species (predatory mites)

• Chemical - Spray small amounts of miticide (insecticide)

• Cultural controls – keeping down the dust• Mechanical – vacuuming up the pests.

Page 29: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What type of agriculture is slash and burn? Explain why.

• Shifting cultivation – they have to move every 5 years or so because the soil becomes nutrient depleted.

Page 30: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is subsistence farming?

• Growing enough food to feed your family and maybe sell a little to make money.

Page 31: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Plantation agriculture is focused on ___________ their food for ________.

• Exporting their food for sale.

Page 32: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Sustainable Agriculture means…..

• Using methods that will not degrade

Page 33: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What were two components of the first green revolution?

• High Yield Varieties• Inorganic Fertilizer Use• Pesticide Use

Page 34: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are two components of the second green revolution?

• Happened in developing countries• Focused on tropical and subtropical areas• Focused on Rice and Wheat (High yield

varieties)

Page 35: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

How does soil become more saline?

• Water has a natural amount of salt in it.• As water evaporates from the top of the soil

the salt gets left behind.• Salt builds up over time.

Page 36: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Explain Waterlogging

• A crop is overwatered.• The water table moves up and covers the

roots.• The roots become immersed in water and the

plant cannot function properly.

Page 37: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is alley cropping?

• Crops planted inbetween rows of trees.

Page 38: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is contour plowing?

• Plowing perpendicular to the slope of a hill to reduce soil erosion.

Page 39: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What are two causes of soil erosion?

• Moving water (this Is the major cause)• Wind

Page 40: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is strip cropping

• Planting rows of different crops in strips next to each other.

Page 41: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

Terracing?

• On a steep hill cutting in flat areas for growing crops.

Page 42: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is larger: A rill or a gully?

• A gully.

Page 43: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is sheet erosion?

• A large amount of topsoil moves off the land at once.

Page 44: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is polyculture?

• Growing many types of crops on one area of land.

Page 45: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

How is a polyculture better at controlling pests than a monoculture?

• A polyculture will have a variety of predatory insects living there.

• A pest will not be able to decimate and entire farm on a polyculture (on a monoculture they could eat the entire crop since its all the same)

Page 46: Soil, Agriculture, Pesticides Slap it! Survive the 5.

What is polyculture?

• Growing many types of crops on one area of land.