Water & Agriculture:
Question 18: Compare point-source pollution and nonpoint-source pollution.
What are the benifits of Nonpoint-source pollution?
A.
B.
C.
Food & Agriculture:
Question 5: "Explain what is involved in integrated pest management. "
Integrated pest management (IPM) is an integrated approach of crop management to solve ecological problems when applied in agriculture.These methods are performed in three stages: prevention, observation, and intervention. It is an ecological approach with a main goal of significantly reducing or eliminating the use of pesticides while at the same time managing pest populations at an acceptable level.
What is the point of Pest management?
A.To give nutrients to the plants
B.To solve ecological problems
C.To help plants grow tall
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Monday, November 8, 2010
Food Inc Articles.
Another Take; Fields of Poison:
So the Fields of Poison article explains how the farmers are getting sick from working with these different pesticides in the fields. When the "Agricultural Workers" as the article refers to them as work closely with these pesticides on a daily bases when mixing and applying the pesticides to the plants, by planting,weeding,harvesting,and processing the crops. They are also inhaling these different pesticides airborne causing illnesses. Some of the illnesses reported from the pesticides were nausea, dizziness, numbness, death and harder side effects to connect back such as cancer, developmental disorders, male infertility, and birth defects. The article states that this has been an increasing problem that many states and countries have been ignoring.There have been 3,000 reported cases of illnesses due to these different pesticides yet no one seems to be doing anything about the problem. California has been doing research on the topic and has been trying to get there act together since the release of an article about the issue in 1999. Some of the main pesticides reported as a poison case include Metam-Sodium with 646 cases, Adjuvant with 604 cases, and Sulfur with 453 reported cases.
The Scope Of The World Food Crisis:
So the "World Food Crisis" is caused by the increasing prices of food prices in crops such as Soybean,Wheat,Rice,Corn etc.Since 2006-2008 the crops like I listed above prices have doubled the amount they were set to be in the beginning of 2006 by the end of 2008.Some of the defects of this food crisis is that more people are suffering from world hunger.In the article it quotes"the figure of those that suffer from hunger has now increased to more than 900 million people." The article also read that "eighty percent of hungry people in the world live in rural areas where food is produced" A example of this would be countries like Asia, China, and Africa.One of the causes of the World Food Crisis is because of the rise in oil prices which increases the prices of the "industrial inputs" such as fertilizers, pesticides and food transportation which all need oil to be transported around to each destination.
Cheap Food; Workers Pay The Price:
The Financial Crisis and World Hunger:
So the Fields of Poison article explains how the farmers are getting sick from working with these different pesticides in the fields. When the "Agricultural Workers" as the article refers to them as work closely with these pesticides on a daily bases when mixing and applying the pesticides to the plants, by planting,weeding,harvesting,and processing the crops. They are also inhaling these different pesticides airborne causing illnesses. Some of the illnesses reported from the pesticides were nausea, dizziness, numbness, death and harder side effects to connect back such as cancer, developmental disorders, male infertility, and birth defects. The article states that this has been an increasing problem that many states and countries have been ignoring.There have been 3,000 reported cases of illnesses due to these different pesticides yet no one seems to be doing anything about the problem. California has been doing research on the topic and has been trying to get there act together since the release of an article about the issue in 1999. Some of the main pesticides reported as a poison case include Metam-Sodium with 646 cases, Adjuvant with 604 cases, and Sulfur with 453 reported cases.
The Scope Of The World Food Crisis:
So the "World Food Crisis" is caused by the increasing prices of food prices in crops such as Soybean,Wheat,Rice,Corn etc.Since 2006-2008 the crops like I listed above prices have doubled the amount they were set to be in the beginning of 2006 by the end of 2008.Some of the defects of this food crisis is that more people are suffering from world hunger.In the article it quotes"the figure of those that suffer from hunger has now increased to more than 900 million people." The article also read that "eighty percent of hungry people in the world live in rural areas where food is produced" A example of this would be countries like Asia, China, and Africa.One of the causes of the World Food Crisis is because of the rise in oil prices which increases the prices of the "industrial inputs" such as fertilizers, pesticides and food transportation which all need oil to be transported around to each destination.
Cheap Food; Workers Pay The Price:
The Financial Crisis and World Hunger:
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Biomes Homework Part 2
Forest:
"Intact, the Amazon produces half its own rainfall through the moisture it releases into the atmosphere. Eliminate enough of that rain through clearing, and the remaining trees dry out and die"
Why are the trees able to adapt to the atmosphere change and store more moisture once it is released into the atmosphere that why it doesn't suffer during the period where there is no moisture?
This quote about the trees made me kind of connect it to my project in Margret's class, which is on the topic of overpopulation. I believe the same thing is going to happen to us once we reach a population of 10billion people. The resources that we have will be used by those who get it and those who luck out will just die off.
Dessert:
"They were, we'd been told, wild and unpredictable and as hard and unforgiving as the sands of the desert"
What did they mean by "as hard and unforgiving as the sands of the desert"?
Even though I don't fully understand what the African people were referring to in the quote above I like the way they used a metaphor as a way to make the comparison rather than just stating they were similar and how.
Fresh Water:
"The trouble, as farmers see it, came to a boiling point in 1997. That's the year coho salmon were accorded federal protection under the Endangered Species Act, which would entitle them to minimum flows of water. In 2001 tensions came to a dramatic head when the federal government shut off irrigation water to some 1,400 Klamath Reclamation Project farmers, including Kandra."
What is irrigation water? Why did it make farmers so mad?
This brings me back to the overpopulation topic that I was talking about above, it kind of sucks to think about but we are now in the same predicament that the animals have somewhat been in for a long time. Before a lot of us have disagreed with the laws against haunting certain animals such as the farmers in the quote above, but once something small turns into something massive the outcome is never to good.
"Intact, the Amazon produces half its own rainfall through the moisture it releases into the atmosphere. Eliminate enough of that rain through clearing, and the remaining trees dry out and die"
Why are the trees able to adapt to the atmosphere change and store more moisture once it is released into the atmosphere that why it doesn't suffer during the period where there is no moisture?
This quote about the trees made me kind of connect it to my project in Margret's class, which is on the topic of overpopulation. I believe the same thing is going to happen to us once we reach a population of 10billion people. The resources that we have will be used by those who get it and those who luck out will just die off.
Dessert:
"They were, we'd been told, wild and unpredictable and as hard and unforgiving as the sands of the desert"
What did they mean by "as hard and unforgiving as the sands of the desert"?
Even though I don't fully understand what the African people were referring to in the quote above I like the way they used a metaphor as a way to make the comparison rather than just stating they were similar and how.
Fresh Water:
"The trouble, as farmers see it, came to a boiling point in 1997. That's the year coho salmon were accorded federal protection under the Endangered Species Act, which would entitle them to minimum flows of water. In 2001 tensions came to a dramatic head when the federal government shut off irrigation water to some 1,400 Klamath Reclamation Project farmers, including Kandra."
What is irrigation water? Why did it make farmers so mad?
This brings me back to the overpopulation topic that I was talking about above, it kind of sucks to think about but we are now in the same predicament that the animals have somewhat been in for a long time. Before a lot of us have disagreed with the laws against haunting certain animals such as the farmers in the quote above, but once something small turns into something massive the outcome is never to good.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Biomes Homework
Post at least 1 question for each biome and try to find an answer for it
Freshwater:
A.What happens to the different species living in the freshwater biome, do they have to adapt to maintain survival in the different zones?
What is the soil like near fresh water?
A:The soil is partially sandy and made up of a few different sediments.
Marine
coral reefs are dieing what does that mean for the ocean?
A.Since coral reefs are a part of the Marine food chain, and with out enough coral reefs the species would began to die. Also a lot of water life such as fish feed off of the coral reefs and make homes from them that if the reefs began to die off that would affect the entire food chain.
Desert
Where do animals in the dessert get water from?
What is the minimal percentage of rainfall the dessert will get?
A: In the American deserts they can get up to 28 cm a year is pretty much the highest percent the dessert would get . "The rain fall in these deserts is very low and is sometimes concentrated in short bursts between long rainless periods."
Forest
What seems to be the most popular plants that live in the forest biome?
A: There are a lot of orchids, passionflowers, ferns, bamboos, and banana plants.
Grassland
What is a positive attribute to the grassland biome that is good for haunting?
All of the grasslands grass is primarily growing and it all grows to the same hieght making it easier for predators to move around in.
Tundra:
Why are the plants somewhat shorter in the Tundra rather than the other biomes?
A:Because the soil in the Tundra biome is so poor the soil is not as deep, which makes the growth spurt for the plants and its reproduction stage cut short. The Tundra biome is also one of the coldest of all the biomes.
Freshwater:
A.What happens to the different species living in the freshwater biome, do they have to adapt to maintain survival in the different zones?
What is the soil like near fresh water?
A:The soil is partially sandy and made up of a few different sediments.
Marine
coral reefs are dieing what does that mean for the ocean?
A.Since coral reefs are a part of the Marine food chain, and with out enough coral reefs the species would began to die. Also a lot of water life such as fish feed off of the coral reefs and make homes from them that if the reefs began to die off that would affect the entire food chain.
Desert
Where do animals in the dessert get water from?
What is the minimal percentage of rainfall the dessert will get?
A: In the American deserts they can get up to 28 cm a year is pretty much the highest percent the dessert would get . "The rain fall in these deserts is very low and is sometimes concentrated in short bursts between long rainless periods."
Forest
What seems to be the most popular plants that live in the forest biome?
A: There are a lot of orchids, passionflowers, ferns, bamboos, and banana plants.
Grassland
What is a positive attribute to the grassland biome that is good for haunting?
All of the grasslands grass is primarily growing and it all grows to the same hieght making it easier for predators to move around in.
Tundra:
Why are the plants somewhat shorter in the Tundra rather than the other biomes?
A:Because the soil in the Tundra biome is so poor the soil is not as deep, which makes the growth spurt for the plants and its reproduction stage cut short. The Tundra biome is also one of the coldest of all the biomes.
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Schedule For Project Completion
Friday: Begin Final Draft of typed report on my ecosystem
Including
-Climate
-Soil
-Water Availability
-Wildlife
-Geography
-Detailed figure of the food web for my ecosystem
Saturday: Continue working on my Final Draft typed report
Sunday Finish Google sketch up model completely
-Fit sketch to scale (1in=10ft)
-Label all plants accurately to legend
Monday
Have project completely done , in correct sizing for print.
Tuesday
Turn complete project in .
Including
-Climate
-Soil
-Water Availability
-Wildlife
-Geography
-Detailed figure of the food web for my ecosystem
Saturday: Continue working on my Final Draft typed report
Sunday Finish Google sketch up model completely
-Fit sketch to scale (1in=10ft)
-Label all plants accurately to legend
Monday
Have project completely done , in correct sizing for print.
Tuesday
Turn complete project in .
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
My Goals For Final Draft
1. Make garden fit to scale
2. Make trees grouped in sets
3.Make Pato 66ft by 22 ft
4.Label legend to garden
2. Make trees grouped in sets
3.Make Pato 66ft by 22 ft
4.Label legend to garden
Sunday, October 3, 2010
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