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LEC-8 Adverse Effects of Modern Agriculture - Sustainable Agriculture - Definition - Concept - Goals - Elements

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LEC-8

Adverse effects of modern agriculture -


sustainable agriculture –definition –concept
– goals – elements.
• Over the history of human settlements on the planet
earth, agriculture has transformed in tune with the
growing population and its challenging needs.
• The transformation has been quite remarkable since
the end of World War II.
• Food and fibre productivity spared up due to
adoption of new technologies viz, HYV, from
mechanization, increased fertilizer & pesticide use,
specialized farming practices, water resource
development & improved irrigation practices and
Government policies that favored maximizing
production.
Adverse effects of modern high- input agriculture

• Overuse of natural resources, causing depletion


of groundwater, and loss of forests, wild habitats,
and of their capacity to absorb water, causing
waterlogging and increased salinity:
• Contamination of the atmosphere by ammonia,
nitrous oxide, methane and the products of
burning, which play a role in ozone depletion,
global warming and atmospheric pollution:
• Contamination of food and fodder by residues
of pesticides, nitrates and antibiotics.
• Contamination of water by pesticides, nitrates,
soil and livestock water, causing harm to
wildlife, disruption of ecosystems and possible
health problems in drinking water;
• Build up of resistance to pesticides in pests and
diseases including herbicide resistance in weeds
• Damage of farm and natural resources by
pesticides, causing harm to farm workers and
public, disruption of ecosystems and harm to
wildlife.
• Erosion of genetic diversity – the tendency in
agriculture to standardize and specialize by
focusing on modern varieties, causing the
displacement of traditional varieties and
breeds:
• New health hazards for workers in the
agrochemical and food processing industries
Definitions of Sustainable Agriculture
• Sustainable Agriculture refers to a range of strategies
for addressing many problems that effect agriculture.
Such problems include loss of soil productivity from
excessive soil erosion and associated plant nutrient
losses, surface and ground water pollution from
pesticides, fertilizers and sediments, impending
shortages of non- renewable resources, and low farm
income from depressed commodity prices and high
production costs. Furthermore, “Sustainable” implies a
time dimension and the capacity of a farming system
to endure indefinitely.
(Lockertz, 1988)
• The successful management of resources for
agriculture to satisfy changing human needs
while maintaining or enhancing the Natural
resource- base and avoiding environmental
degradation
(TAC-CGIAR, 1988)
• A sustainable agriculture is a system of
agriculture that is committed to maintain and
preserve the agriculture base of soil, water,
and atmosphere ensuring future generations
the capacity to feed themselves with an
adequate supply of safe and wholesome food’
(Gracet, 1990)
• ‘A Sustainable Agriculture system is one that
can indefinitely meet demands for food and
fibre at socially acceptable, economic and
environment cost’
(Crosson, 1992)
Current concept of sustainable agriculture
• The ultimate goal or the ends of sustainable
agriculture is to develop farming systems that
are productive and profitable, conserve the
natural resource base, protect the environment,
and enhance health and safety, and to do so over
the long-term.
• This approach emphasizes such cultural and
management practices as crop rotations,
recycling of animal manures, and conservation
tillage to control soil erosion and nutrient losses
and to maintain or enhance soil productivity.
• Low-input farming systems seek to minimize
the use of external production inputs (i.e.,
off-farm resources), such as purchased
fertilizers and pesticides, wherever and
whenever feasible and practicable: to lower
production costs: to avoid pollution of surface
and groundwater: to reduce pesticide residues
in food: to reduce a farmer’s overall risk.
methods and
skilled
management
Productive and Profitable

Conserves Resources and


protects the environment

Enhances health and safety


LOW INPUT METHODS AND SKILLED MANAGEMENT:

• Reduced use of synthetics


• Biological pest control
• Soil and water conservation practices
• Use of animal and green manures
• Biotechnology
• Crop rotation
• Use of organic wastes
• Crop livestock diversification
• Mechanical cultivation
• Naturally occurring processes
Goals of sustainable Agriculture
• A more thorough incorporation of natural
processes such as nutrient cycling nitrogen
fixation and pest-predator relationships into
agricultural production processes:
• A reduction in the use of those off-farm,
external and nonrenewable inputs with the
greatest potential to damage the environment
or harm the health of farmers and consumers,
and more targeted use of the remaining inputs
used with a view to minimizing variable costs:
• The full participation of farmers and rural people in
all processes of problem analysis and technology
development, adoption and extension.
• A more equitable access to predictive resources and
opportunities, and progress towards more socially
just forms of Agriculture:
• A greater productive use of the biological and
genetic potential of plant and animal species:
• A greater productive use of local knowledge and
practices, including innovation in approaches not
yet fully understood byscientists or widely adopted
by farmers:
• An increase in self-reliance among farmers
and rural people and
• Profitable and efficient production with an
emphasis on integrated form management: and
the conservation of soil, water, energy and
biological resources
Elements of sustainability
a)Soil conservation-
Many soil conservation methods, including contour
cultivates contour bunding, graded bunding, vegetative
barriers, strip cropping cover cropping, reduced tillage etc
help prevent loss of soil due to wind and water erosion.
b) Crop diversity-
Growing a greater variety of crops on a farm can help
reduce risks from extremes in weather, market conditions
or crop pests. Increased diversity crops and other plants,
such as trees and shrubs, also can contribute to soil
conservation, wildlife habitat and increased populations of
beneficial insects
c) Nutrient management- Proper management of
nitrogen and other plant nutrients con improve the
soil and protect environment. Increased use of farm
nutrient sources such as manure and leguminous
cover crops, also reduces purchased fertilizer costs.
d) Integrated pest management (IPM)- IPM is a
sustainable approach to managing pests by
combining biological, cultural, physical and
chemical tools in way that minimizes economic,
health and environmental risks.
e) Cover crops- Growing plant such as sun hemp,
horse gram, pillipesara in the off season after
harvesting a grain or vegetable crop can provide
several benefits, including weed suppression, erosion
control, and improved soil nutrients and soil quality .
f) Rotational grazing- New management- intensive
grazing systems take animals out barn into the
pasture to provide high-quality forage and reduced
feed cost .
• g) Water quality & water conservation-
Water conservation and protection have
important part of Agricultural stewardship.
Many practices have been develop conserve
Viz., deep ploughing, mulching, micro
irrigation techniques etc.., protect quality of
drinking and surfacewater .
h) Agro forestry- Trees and other woody perennials
are often underutilized on covers a range of practices
Viz., ogi-silvicuture, silive-pastoral, agri-silvi-pagri-
horticulture, horti/ silvipastoral, alley cropping, tree
farming , lay farm that help conserve, soil and water.
i) Marketing- Farmers across the country are
finding that improved marketing-way to enhance
profitability, direct marketing of agricultural product
from farmers to consumers is becoming much more
common, including through Rythu bazaar rod side
stands .
THANK YOU
LEC 9
Problems related to soil, water and environment - adaptation
and mitigation strategies - indicators of sustainability.
Land/soil related problems
• Soil degradation
• Soil degradation refers to decline tin the
productive capacity of land due to decline in
soil quality caused through processed induced
mainly by human activities.
• It is a global problem. The Global Assessment
of the Status of Human-induced soil
Degradation (GLASOD) was the first
worldwide comparative analysis focusing
specifically on soil degradation.
• Worldwide around 1.96. Billion ha are affected
by human induced soil degradation, mainly
caused by water and wind erosion (1094 and
548 million ha respectively).
• Chemical degradation accounted for 240 million ha,
mainly nutrient decline (136 million ha) and salinization
(77 million ha), physical degradation occurred on 83
million ha, mainly as a result of compaction, sealing and
crusting.
• It is also a very important problem in India, which shares
only 2.4% of the world’s land resource and supports more
than 18% of the world’s human population and 15% of
livestock population. Estimates of soil degradation are
varied depending upon the criteria used. soil degradation
are generally triggered by excessive pressure on land to
meet the competing demands of growing population for
food, fodder, fibre and fuel.
The most common direct causes include:
• Deforestation of fragile lands
• Over cutting and grazing of vegetation
• Extension of cultivation on to lands of low
capability/potential
• Improper crop rotations
• Unbalanced fertilizer use
• Non-adoption of soil conservation practices
• Inadequacies in planning and management of
irrigation resources
• Overdraft of groundwater in excess of capacity to
recharge
Deforestation
• Deforestation, in strict sense of the term, refers
to the transfer of forest land to non-forest uses
and includes all land where the forest cover
has been stripped off and the land converted to
such uses as permanent cultivation, shifting
cultivation, human settlements, mining,
reservoirs etc.
• Deforestation continues to threaten and erode
the area under fores cover in several countries
of the World.
The underlying causes of deforestation are
• (i) The combined effects of poverty, skewed
land distribution, and rising population
pressure
• (ii) Increased demand for tropical timber and
Agricultural products, and
• (iii) International debt obligations, which can
lead developing countries to accelerate the
pace of forest exploitation in order to earn
needed foreign exchange
• The forest area in India has shrunk from 33%
in 1947 to 22.6 % at present. As per the
recommended norm of the National Forest
Policy 1988, about 33% of the geographical
area should be under the forest cover, which
comes to about 110 million ha compared to
68.83 million ha presently under the forest
cover in India
Accelerated Soil erosion
• Agricultural productivity depends largely on
the topsoil (up to 20 cm thickness), as it serves
many functions such as – support for rooting,
supply of plant nutrients, storage and release
of soil moisture etc.
• The loss of the topsoil usually instigated by the
activities of man, termed as accelerated soil
erosion, is the most serious form of land
degradation.
• Abalance is maintained between soil loss and
soil formation, but when vegetation is stripped
away, as in deforestation and shifting
cultivation, the soil becomes vulnerable to
damage by wind and water and the slow rate
of natural erosion is accelerated.
Soil Erosion estimates in India
• On an average rate of 16.35 tonnes/ha/year
totaling 5.334 million tones/year. Nearly 29%
of the total eroded soil was permanently lost
to the sea; and nearly 10% was deposited in
multipurpose reservoirs, resulting in the
reduction of their storage capacity by 1-2%
annually. The remaining 61% of the eroded
soil was transported from one place to
another.
• Along with the eroded topsoil, three major
plant nutrients viz.,
• Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium ranging
from 4.4 to 8.4 tonnes are also lost.
• Crop yields are reduced by erosion through
less supply of plant nutrients, shallow depth of
soil, poor structure, surface sealing and
crusting, which leads to reduced water
infiltration and poor seedling establishment.
Siltataion of Reservoirs
• Siltation of reservoirs is the major off-site effect of soil
erosion by water.
• The process of deposition of soil particles carried by water is
called sedimentation or siltation.
• Sedimentation or siltation is both a serious and growing
problem, but its severity varies from one reservoir to another.
• Usually, every reservoir is provided with certain storage
capacity to accommodate for the natural sedimentation rate,
which capacity is called its dead storage.
• Sediment accumulation is not controlled in most of the
reservoirs and they are irreversibly getting filled with
sediment and constitute the most non-sustainable water
resource system in India today.
The life of many irrigation reservoirs has been reduced by
accelerated soil erosion in the catchment’s area and
increased the rates of siltation more than the assumed rates
at the of planning stage
• The conditions indicative of high sediment yield
potential from cropland and other sources in the
catchment’s area are given below:
I) Cropland
• Long slopes formed without terraces or run-off
diversions
• Crop rows planted up and down on moderate or steep
slopes
• No crop residues on soil surface after seeding a new
crop
• No crop cover between harvest and establishment of
new crop canopy
• Poor crop stands or poor quality of vegetation
• II) Other sources
• Gullies
• Residential or commercial constructions
• Road or railway tract construction
• Poorly managed range, wastelands or wooded
lands
• Un-stabilized road or railway tract banks
• Surface mining areas, etc
• Usually, it is better to take steps that prevent
sedimentation, either engineering or
agronomic, rather than clearing the sediments
mechanically, which is not only very
expensive but also highly impractical.
• Some engineering and agronomic measures
suggested for prevention of salutation reservoirs
are given below:
a) Engineering Measures
• Provision of scour sluices in the body of dam and
whose opening from to time clear of the
sediments
• Construction of small impounding tanks in the
valley upstream to break up water flow rate and
shared silt load before the flow reaches final
storage
b) Agronomic Measures
• Cover crops
• Afforestation
• Pastures
• Contour cultivation
• Contour bunding
• Live bunding
• Grassed waterways
Problems related to water
• General water problems :
Biological :
Some viruses, bacteria or parasites or water
borne. These can cause serious diseases in
people in direct contact with this contaminated
water.
Chemical :
• Heavy metals like lead, Aluminum enter the
water
• Oil spills and radioactive spills.
Physical :
• Water shortage
• Water pollution
• Water quality
• Water dryness.
Effects of water problems: 
• Poisoning of drinking water
• Death of animals and plants living in the water
• Unbalanced river and ocean eco-systems
• Human diseases like diarrhea, cholera, hepatitis and death.
Solutions : 
• Creating awareness in people
• Water desalination
• Good water waste treatment
• More government investment
• Planting more trees
• Saving water
• Don’t throw garbage into water.
Causes of Agricultural Water Problem
• Poor Planning on Water Usage
• Chemical Usage and Poor Waste Management
• Competition for Water Resources
• Absence of Trace Minerals
• Effects of Agricultural Water Problems
• Accessibility and Health Challenges
• Endangers Aquatic Life
• Low Productivity in Irrigated Lands
• Salinization and waterlogging are increasingly
reducing productivity levels of irrigated lands
• Solving the Agricultural Water Problem
• Government Regulations
• Encourage Organic Farming
• Encourage Sustainable Agriculture
• Encourage Water Catchment
Environmental Problems

1. Pollution: 
2. Global Warming: 
3. Natural Resource Depletion
4. Waste Disposal- Plastics
5. Loss of Biodiversity
6. Ocean Acidification
7. Acid Rain: 
8. Public Health Issues
9. Genetic Engineering
Soil indicators for sustainability

• Bulk Density:
• Rooting Depth:
• pH Soil:
• Electrical conductivity:
• Soil organic matter
• Potentially Mineralisable C and N:
WATER INDICATORS FOR SUSTAINABILITY
• Water availability: People and ecosystems
need sufficient quantities of water to support the
benefits, services and functions they provide.
These indicator categories refer to the total
amount of water available to be allocated for
human and ecosystem uses.
• Water use sustainability: Measures of the
degree to which water use meets current needs
while protecting ecosystems and the interests of
future generations. This could include the ratio
of water withdrawn to renewable supply. 
• Water quality: People and ecosystems need
water of sufficient quality to support the benefits,
services and functions they provide. This
indicator category is for composite measures of
the suitability of water quality for human and
ecosystem uses.
• Water quality sustainability: Composite
measures of the degree to which water quality
satisfies human and ecosystem needs. 
• Withdrawal and use of water: Measures of the
amount of water withdrawn from the environment
and the uses to which it is put. 
• Water-dependent resource use: Measures of
the extent to which people use resources like
fish and shellfish that depend on water
resources.
• Indices of biological condition: Measures of
the health of ecosystems. 
• Capacity and reliability of infrastructure:
Measures of the capacity and reliability of
infrastructure to meet human and ecosystem
needs.
THANK YOU

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