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🌿 Farming Techniques

Spec 4.7.5.2 📗 Foundation
📖 In-Depth Theory

Increasing Farming Efficiency

The EFFICIENCY of food production can be improved by reducing energy losses from food animals to the environment.
METHODS FOR ANIMALS:
RESTRICTING MOVEMENT:
Animals that move less use less energy in respiration → more energy retained as body mass.
Factory farming — animals kept in small enclosures (battery hens, veal calves).
CONTROLLING TEMPERATURE:
Warm environments mean less energy spent maintaining body temperature.
Indoor farming with controlled heating.
HIGH-PROTEIN FEED:
Animals fed concentrated, high-protein foods → faster growth.
Fish meal, soya protein used in poultry and pig farming.
ANTIBIOTICS (historically):
Preventing disease → less energy lost to fighting infection → faster growth.
(Now regulated in many countries due to antibiotic resistance concerns.)
METHODS FOR CROPS:
PESTICIDES — kill insects, fungi, bacteria that damage crops.
HERBICIDES — kill weeds competing with crops for light and nutrients.
FERTILISERS — add essential minerals (NPK) to soil → better crop growth.
GREENHOUSES — controlled temperature, CO₂ levels, watering → extended growing season, higher yields.
MONOCULTURE — growing one crop type over large areas → economical but reduces biodiversity.

Ethical Considerations

INTENSIVE FARMING raises ETHICAL CONCERNS:
ANIMAL WELFARE:
Battery hens cannot spread wings or exhibit natural behaviour.
Veal calves confined in small crates — restricted movement causes distress.
Pigs in gestation crates unable to turn around.
Many consumers and scientists consider these practices inhumane.
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS:
Intensive use of fertilisers → EUTROPHICATION — excess nutrients in waterways → algal blooms → deoxygenation → fish death.
Pesticide runoff damages non-target species (bees, other insects).
Monoculture reduces habitat diversity and biodiversity.
Greenhouse gas emissions from livestock (methane from cattle).
BALANCING ACT:
Intensive farming produces more food more cheaply → feeds more people.
But ethical and environmental costs are significant.
Consumers, farmers and governments must balance food production needs with animal welfare and environmental protection.
ORGANIC FARMING:
No pesticides, artificial fertilisers or routine antibiotics.
Higher animal welfare standards.
Lower yields but reduced environmental impact.
More expensive — not accessible to all.

Biological Control

BIOLOGICAL CONTROL uses natural predators or parasites to control pests — an alternative to pesticides.
EXAMPLES:
Ladybirds and lacewings to control aphids on crops.
Bacillus thuringiensis bacteria (Bt) — produces toxins lethal to caterpillars but safe for other organisms.
Sterile insect technique — release sterile male insects to reduce pest populations.
Parasitic wasps to control whitefly in greenhouses.
ADVANTAGES over pesticides:
No chemical residues on food.
Specific to target pest — less impact on other species.
Sustainable — natural populations maintain themselves.
No pesticide resistance developing.
DISADVANTAGES:
Slower acting than pesticides.
Can be less predictable — natural populations fluctuate.
Introduced species can become invasive (if not chosen carefully).
Not effective against all pests.
⚠️ Common Mistake

Restricting farm animal movement improves efficiency because it reduces ENERGY LOST IN RESPIRATION — not because it makes animals grow faster through some other mechanism. The energy that would have been used for movement is retained as biomass instead.

📌 Key Note

Intensive farming: restrict movement + control temperature → less respiration → more biomass. High-protein feed, pesticides, herbicides, fertilisers, greenhouses improve yield. Ethical concerns: animal welfare, eutrophication, biodiversity loss. Biological control: natural predators instead of pesticides.

🎯 Matching Activity — Farming Methods

Match each farming technique to how it improves food production. — drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

Restricting animal movement
Drop here
Controlling temperature
Drop here
Using fertilisers
Drop here
Biological control
Drop here
Uses natural predators to control pests — no chemical residues, less damage to non-target species
Adds essential minerals (NPK) to soil — improves crop growth and yield
Less energy spent maintaining body temperature — more energy available for growth
Less energy used in respiration for muscle activity — more energy retained as body mass
🔬 Triple Science Only

Farming techniques (4.7.5.2) is biology-only. Includes methods to improve efficiency (restricting movement, controlling temperature), ethical objections to intensive farming, and biological pest control.

🎯 Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Why do some people have ethical objections to intensive farming of chickens?
2. What is the advantage of using biological control instead of pesticides to manage crop pests?
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