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Agriculture - Crops |  | Agriculture - Crops: Encyclopedia II - Agriculture - Crops |  |
Agriculture - World production of major crops in 2004.
In millions of metric tons, based on FAO estimates[2]:
By crop types
Cereals 2,264
Vegetables and melons 866
Roots and Tubers 715
Milk 619
Fruit 503
Meat 259
Oilcrops 133
Fish 130 (2001 estimate)
Eggs 63
Pulses 60
Vegetable Fiber 30
By individual crops
Sugar Cane 1,324
Maize 721
Wheat 627
Rice 605
Potatoes 328
Sugar Beet 249
Soybean 204
Oil Palm Fruit 162
...
See also:Agriculture, Agriculture - Overview, Agriculture - History, Agriculture - Crops, Agriculture - World production of major crops in 2004, Agriculture - Crop improvement, Agriculture - Environmental problems, Agriculture - Policy, Agriculture - Agricultural Revolutions, Agriculture - Methods |  | | Agriculture, Agriculture - Agricultural Revolutions, Agriculture - Crop improvement, Agriculture - Crops, Agriculture - Environmental problems, Agriculture - History, Agriculture - Methods, Agriculture - Overview, Agriculture - Policy, Agriculture - World production of major crops in 2004, Agricultural and Food Research Council, UK, Agricultural education, Agricultural science, Agricultural sciences basic topics, Arid-zone agriculture, Barnyard, Community-supported agriculture, International agricultural research, Family farm hog pen, Farm equipment, Land Allocation Decision Support System, List of domesticated animals, List of subsistence techniques, List of sustainable agriculture topics, Permaculture, Protein per unit area, Timeline of agriculture and food technology., USA agriculture |  | |
|  |  | Agriculture: Encyclopedia II - Agriculture - Crops
Agriculture - Crops
Agriculture - World production of major crops in 2004
In millions of metric tons, based on FAO estimates[2]:
By crop types
Cereals 2,264
Vegetables and melons 866
Roots and Tubers 715
Milk 619
Fruit 503
Meat 259
Oilcrops 133
Fish 130 (2001 estimate)
Eggs 63
Pulses 60
Vegetable Fiber 30
By individual crops
Sugar Cane 1,324
Maize 721
Wheat 627
Rice 605
Potatoes 328
Sugar Beet 249
Soybean 204
Oil Palm Fruit 162
Barley 154
Tomato 120
Agriculture - Crop improvement
- See main article on Plant breeding
Domestication of plants is done in order to increase yield, improve disease resistance and drought tolerance, ease harvest and to improve the taste and nutritional value and many other characteristics. Centuries of careful selection and breeding have had enormous effects on the characteristics of crop plants. Plant breeders use greenhouses and other techniques to get as many as three generations of plants per year so that they can make improvements all the more quickly.
Plant selection and breeding in the 1920s and '30s improved pasture (grasses and clover) in New Zealand. Extensive radiation mutagenesis efforts (i.e. primitive genetic engineering) during the 1950s produced the modern commercial varieties of grains such as wheat, corn and barley.
For example, average yields of corn (maize) in the USA have increased from around 2.5 tons per hectare (40 bushels per acre) in 1900 to about 9.4 t/ha (150 bushels per acre) in 2001, primarily due to improvements in genetics. Similarly, worldwide average wheat yields have increased from less than 1 t/ha in 1900 to more than 2.5 t/ha in 1990. South American average wheat yields are around 2 t/ha, African under 1 t/ha, Egypt and Arabia up to 3.5 to 4 t/ha with irrigation. In contrast, the average wheat yield in countries such as France is over 8 t/ha. Higher yields are due to improvements in genetics, as well as use of intensive farming techniques (use of fertilizers, chemical pest control, growth control to avoid lodging). [Conversion note: 1 bushel of wheat = 60 pounds (lb) ≈ 27.215 kg. 1 bushel of corn = 56 pounds ≈ 25.401 kg]
In industrialized agriculture, crop "improvement" has often reduced nutritional and other qualities of food plants to serve the interests of producers. After mechanical tomato-harvesters were developed in the early 1960s, agricultural scientists bred tomatoes that were harder and less nutritious (Friedland and Barton 1975). In fact, a major longitudinal study of nutrient levels in numerous vegetables showed significant declines in the last 50 years; garden vegetables in the U.S. today contain on average 38 percent less vitamin B2 and 15 percent less vitamin C (Davis and Riordan 2004).
Very recently, genetic engineering has begun to be employed in some parts of the world to speed up the selection and breeding process. The most widely used modification is a herbicide resistance gene that allows plants to tolerate exposure to glyphosate, which is used to control weeds in the crop. A less frequently used but more controversial modification causes the plant to produce a toxin to reduce damage from insects (c.f. Starlink).
There are specialty producers who raise less common types of livestock or plants.
Aquaculture, the farming of fish, shrimp, and algae, is closely associated with agriculture.
Apiculture, the culture of bees, traditionally for honey—increasingly for crop pollination.
See also : botany, List of domesticated plants, List of vegetables, List of herbs, List of fruit
Other related archives10th millennium BC, 1492, 1800s, 1900, 1950s, 1990, 19th, 2001, 20th century, Abu Hureyra, Aerial topdressing, African, Agricultural and Food Research Council, Agricultural education, Agricultural machinery, Agricultural policy, Agricultural science, Agricultural sciences basic topics, Anatolia, Apiculture, Aquaculture, Archaeobotanists, Arid-zone agriculture, Barley, Barnyard, Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy, British Agricultural Revolution, Bronze Age, CAFO, Central, Central Asia, Cereals, Columbian Exchange, Community-supported agriculture, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation, Cyprus, Eggs, Egypt, Epi-Palaeolithic, Erosion, Europe, FAO, Family farm hog pen, Farm equipment, Fertile Crescent, Fish, Food preservation, Food quality, Food safety, Food security, France, Fruit, GDP, Genetically engineered, Greece, Green Revolution, Holocene, Hydroponics, IPM, India, Integrated Pest Management, International agricultural research, Irrigation, Land Allocation Decision Support System, Levant, List of domesticated animals, List of domesticated plants, List of fruit, List of herbs, List of subsistence techniques, List of sustainable agriculture topics, List of vegetables, Maize, Meat, Meat packing industry, Middle Ages, Milk, National Academy of Engineering, Neolithic Revolution, Nile, Nile valley, Nitrogen, Oilcrops, PPNB, Palm, Particulate matter, Permaculture, Pest control, Plant breeding, Potatoes, Pre-Pottery Neolithic B, Protein per unit area, Pulses, Rice, Roots, Soil, Soil salination, South America, South American, Southeast Asia, Soybean, Starlink, Sugar Beet, Sugar Cane, Sumerians, Syria, Timeline of agriculture and food technology, Tomato, Tubers, USA agriculture, Vegetable Fiber, Vegetables, Weeds, Western world, Wheat, Younger Dryas, aerial topdressing, aeroponics, agrichemicals, agricultural machinery, agricultural science, agriculturalist, air pollution, alcohols, algae, ammonia, ammonium, animal feeds, animal hides, animal husbandry, animals, anthropological, aquaculture, arable land, archaeological, barley, beekeeping, biocides, biodiesel, biomass, biopharmaceuticals, biopiracy, bitter vetch, blades, botany, capital, chick pea, climate, cocaine, community-supported agriculture, composting, conservation, cotton, crop rotation, culture, dairy farming, detasseling, domestication, drainage, economic activity, ecosystems, einkorn wheat, emmer wheat, empire, ethanol, factory farming, farming, feed, fencing, feral, fertilizers, fiber, fibers, fish, flax, flowers, food, fossil fuel, founder crops, fungicides, gene manipulation, genetic engineering, grain, greenhouse, grinding, harvest, harvesting, heliciculture, hemp, herbicides, honey, hunter-gatherer, hybrid seed, hydroponics, industrial agriculture, insecticides, intensive agriculture, irrigation, labour, lakes, leather, lentil, livestock, local food movement, maize, marijuana, market gardening, mechanization, melons, methane, minerals, mono-cropping, monoculture, nitrogen, no-till farming, nursery, nutrient management, nutritional, opium, organic farming, pasture, pea, people, pest control, phosphorus, plant breeding, plants, plastics, pollination, pollination management, precision farming, produce, rachis, ranching, rice, rivers, rye, season extension, seed, seed saving, seeds, shepherding, shrimp, sickle, slow food, soil, sowing, sphere of influence, squash, starch, stewardship, subsistence agriculture, subsistence farming, succession planting, sugar, sustainable agriculture, terracing, three field system, threshing, tillage, timber, tobacco, tomato, tractor, vegetable farming, waste, weed control, wheat, wool, world
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Crops", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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