Agriculture Glossary



Agriculture Glossary

Term
Definition
Acid soils
Soil with a pH of less than 7.0.
Agribusiness
-Agriculturally related businesses that supply farm inputs (such as fertilizer or equipment) or are involved in the marketing of farm products (such as warehouses, processors, wholesalers, transporters, and retailers). Farms are not usually included when the term agribusiness is used.
Agroecosystem
is a modified natural ecosystems to optimize the production of human food, including consideration of wider issues such as resource usage and environmental impacts
Alcohol
The family name of a group of organic chemical compounds that includes methanol, ethanol, isopropyl alcohol, and others. Ethanol is produced from crops or residues with high carbohydrate content. Alcoholic beverages contain ethanol, and ethanol is blended with gasoline to produce gasohol.
Alkaline soil
Soil with a pH of more than 7.0.
Alternative energy
Substitutes for traditional liquid, oil-derived motor vehicle fuels like gasoline and diesel. Includes methanol, ethanol, biodiesel, compressed natural gas, and others. The alternatives are promoted for pollution reduction properties and/or to reduce U.S. dependence on imported oil. Ethanol can be produced from grain, agricultural wastes, and excess crops.
Animal drugs
Drugs intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in animals.
Animal identification
Currently, the private marketing system, assisted by computerization of records, generally can trace products back to their original suppliers. Livestock passports identify animals using back-tags, ear tags, tattoos, and other devices.
Antibiotics
Chemical substances produced by microorganisms or synthetically that inhibit the growth of, or destroy, bacteria. Antibiotics are used at therapeutic levels to fight disease in humans and animals. Since the 1950s they have been used at sub-therapeutic levels in animal feeds to enhance growth and prevent disease in livestock and poultry. There are rules guiding the use of veterinary drugs and medicated animal feeds, including tolerance levels for drug residues in meats for human consumption
Aquaculture
The production of aquatic plants or animals in a controlled environment, such as ponds, raceways, tanks, or cages, for all or part of their life cycle. Prawns, salmon, shrimp, tropical (or ornamental) fish, and trout account for most of the aquacultural growing production. Less widely established but growing species include alligator, hybrid striped bass, carp, eel, red fish, northern pike, sturgeon and tilapia.
Aquifer
An underground geological formation, containing usable amounts of groundwater that can supply wells or springs for domestic, industrial, and irrigation uses.
Artificial insemination (AI)
-The mechanical injection of semen into the womb of the female animal with a syringe-like apparatus.
ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations
A multilateral organization formed in 1967 by the governments of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand to promote economic, social, and cultural cooperation among nations in the Southeast Asian region. Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar joined later.
Barrier crops
Reduce chance of pest finding the crop. E.g. onions protect carrots from root fly attack due to their strong smell
Bioaccumulation
The absorption and concentration of toxic chemicals, heavy metals, and certain pesticides in plants and animals. Toxicity can be expressed in several ways: lead that is ingested by calves can bioaccumulate in their bones, interfering with calcium absorption and bone development; stored chemicals may be released to the blood stream at a later time, for example, during gestation or weight loss; and chemicals may concentrate to lethal levels at  upper ends of the food chain. Bioconcentration is a synonym for biaccumulation.
Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD)
A measure of the amount of oxygen consumed by natural, biological processes that break down organic matter, such as those that take place when manure or sawdust is put in water. High levels of oxygen-demanding wastes in waters deplete dissolved oxygen (DO) thereby endangering aquatic life. Sometimes referred to as "biological oxygen demand.
Biodiesel
It is typically produced through the reaction of a vegetable oil or animal fat with methanol in the presence of a catalyst to yield glycerin and biodiesel (chemically called methyl esters). It is an alternative fuel that can be used by itself or blended with petroleum diesel for use in diesel engines. Its use can result in substantial reduction of unburned hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and particulate matter.
Biodiversity
In general, the variety and variation among plants, animals, and microorganisms, and among their ecosystems. It has 3 levels: ecosystem diversity, species diversity, and genetic (within species) diversity. The concept of maintaining biodiversity holds that civilization should preserve the greatest possible number of existing species so that a highly diverse genetic pool, which can be tapped for useful and beneficial characteristics, will be available into the future. Genetic diversity provides resources for genetic resistance to pests and diseases. In agriculture, biodiversity is a production system characterized by the presence of multiple plant and/or animal species, as contrasted with the genetic specialization of monoculture.
Biological control
Involves the introduction of predators, pathogens or parasites of the pest. e.g. Whitefly control by chalcid wasp
Biomagnification
 (AKA biological magnification) The increase in the concentration of bioaccumulated toxic chemicals in organisms higher on the food chain due to preferential storage of the toxic chemical in edible body parts. For example, chlorinated pesticides concentrate in the fat and skin of fish in contaminated lakes and streams and are biomagnified when those fish are eaten by larger fish, and perhaps eventually by mammals or birds of prey.
Biomass
The generic term for any living matter that can be converted into usable energy through biological or chemical processes. It encompasses feedstocks such as agricultural crops and their residues, animal wastes, wood, wood residues and grasses, and municipal wastes.
Bio-security; bio-terrorism
(US definition)
"Bio-security" refers to the policies, and measures taken, for protecting a nation’s food supply and agricultural resources from both accidental contamination and deliberate attacks of "bio-terrorism." Now viewed as an emerging threat, bio-terrorism might include such acts as introducing pests intended to kill U.S. food crops; spreading a virulent disease among animal production facilities; and poisoning water, food, and blood supplies. The federal government is now increasing its efforts to improve bio-security because of the recognition that the United States is currently vulnerable, both from a civil and military standpoint.
Biotechnology
The use of technology, based on living systems, to develop processes and products for commercial, scientific or other purposes. These include specific techniques of plant regeneration and gene manipulation and transfer. In the past, producers used cross-hybridization to alter a plant's genetic makeup. With biotechnology, DNA can be altered directly
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)
Commonly known as "mad cow disease," BSE is a slowly progressive, incurable disease affecting the central nervous system of cattle, first diagnosed in Britain in 1986. Consumption by cattle of BSE-contaminated ruminant proteins in animal feed has been cited as one possible means of transmission. Scientists have confirmed a link between BSE in cattle and several dozen recent European cases of a human variant of BSE, Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease. More than 77,000 cattle suspected of having been exposed to the disease have been slaughtered in Great Britain, and a ban on ruminant protein-containing feeds was imposed in 1988.
Bovine tuberculosis
A highly contagious disease of cattle that causes severe economic losses, especially in dairy herds. Farmers insist TB is transferred by badgers and there is controversy about culling them.
Broiler
A young chicken, usually 6 to 8 weeks old and 3 to 5 pounds, raised primarily for its meat, associated with intensive poultry farming.
Buffer strips
Slender areas of permanent vegetation, often planted along the edge or the contour of a field, usually to slow the flow of water or the velocity of wind, in order to capture sediment and other materials before they leave the farm and become pollutants. Types of buffers include filter strips, field borders, grassed waterways, field windbreaks, shelterbelts, contour grass strips, and riparian ( along waterways) buffers.
Bycatch
Fish or other sea creatures caught unintentionally during commercial fishing operations
Carbon sequestration
Retention of carbon in ways that prevent or delay its emission to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. This may help mitigate climate change by reducing the amount in the atmosphere. Silvicultural practices that encourage rapid, long term tree growth are an example. Crop residue retention practices designed to prevent erosion and improve the productivity of soil, such as conservation tillage, also retain larger amounts of carbon compared to many traditional cultivation practices.
Carrying capacity
The maximum stocking rate for livestock possible without damaging vegetation or related resources.
Cash Crops
Commercial arable e.g. mange tout in Kenya
Center pivot irrigation
A self-propelled irrigation system in which a single pipeline supported on towers rotates around a central point.
Channelization
Engineering watercourses by straightening, widening, or deepening them so water will move faster. While improving drainage, this process can interfere with waste assimilation capacity, disturb fish and wildlife habitats, and aggravate flooding in other areas.
Chronic Hunger
Long-term hunger caused by endemic problems of availability and access, rather than by temporary emergencies.
Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) -
The set of legislation and practices jointly adopted by the nations of the European Union (EU) in order to provide a common, unified policy framework for agriculture. Its stated purposes are to increase farm productivity, stabilize markets, ensure a fair standard of living for farmers, guarantee regular supplies, and ensure reasonable prices for consumers.
Composting
The controlled biological decomposition of organic material, such as sewage sludge, animal manures, or crop residues, in the presence of air to form a humus-like material. Controlled methods of composting include mechanical mixing and aerating, ventilating the materials by dropping them through a vertical series of aerated chambers, or placing the compost in piles out in the open air and mixing it or turning it periodically.
Conservation
The management of human and natural resources to provide maximum benefits over a sustained period of time (see sustainable agriculture). In farming, conservation entails matching cropping patterns and the productive potential and physical limitations of agricultural lands to ensure long-term sustainability of profitable production. Conservation practices focus on conserving soil, water, energy, and biological resources. Contour farming, no-till farming, and integrated pest management are typical examples of conservation practices
Conservation tillage
Any tillage and planting system that leaves at least 30% of the soil surface covered by residue after planting. Conservation tillage maintains a ground cover with less soil disturbance than traditional cultivation, thereby reducing soil loss and energy use while maintaining crop yields and quality. Conservation tillage techniques include minimum tillage, mulch tillage, ridge tillage, and no-till.
Cooperative
An enterprise or organization owned by and operated for the benefit of those using its services. In agriculture, such an organization is owned and used by farmers mainly to handle the off-farm part of their businesses — buying farm supplies, marketing their products, furnishing electric and telephone service, and providing business services —at cost. Essential features are democratic control, limited return on capital, and operation at cost, with distribution of financial benefits to individuals in proportion to their use of the services made available by the cooperative
Cover crop
A close-growing crop, planted primarily as a rotation between regularly planted crops, or between trees and vines in orchards and vineyards, to protect soil from erosion and improve it between periods of regular crops.
Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease (CJD)
A sporadic and rare, but fatal human disease that usually strikes people over 65. It occurs worldwide at an estimated annual rate of one case per million population. About 10-15% of CJD cases are inherited. A small number of cases occurred as the result of various medical treatments or procedures which inadvertently transferred the CJD agent. In March 1996, the British government announced a possible link between bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) and CJD. The announcement was prompted by the discovery of several atypical cases of CJD in Great Britain.
Crop insurance
Insurance that protects farmers from crop losses due to natural hazards. This is only available in MEDCs e.g.  Hail and fire insurance are offered through private companies without federal subsidy in the USA
Crop residue
That portion of a plant, such as a corn stalk, left in the field after harvest. Crop residues can be used a straw materials or by products, also farmers use conservation tillage
Crop rotation
The growing of different crops, in recurring succession, on the same land in contrast to monoculture cropping. Crop rotation helps to spread the demand for nutrients by growing different crops each year, often in a four year cycle.
Culling
The selective killing of competitors can keep their population to a level where damage is acceptable. E.g. killing of rabbits or deer
Cultural methods
Practices used to enhance crop and livestock health and prevent weed, pest or disease problems without the use of chemical substances; examples include the selection of appropriate varieties and planting sites; selection of appropriate breeds of livestock; providing livestock facilities designed to meet requirements of species or type of livestock; proper timing and density of plantings; irrigation; and extending a growing season by manipulating the microclimate with green houses, cold frames, or wind breaks.
DDT
The abbreviated name of a chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticide, dichloro-diphenyl-trichloromethane. It is persistent in the environment and biomagnifies in birds of prey. The Environmental Protection Agency canceled U.S. registration of virtually all but emergency uses of DDT in 1972.
Diversification
Involves farmers producing new products or providing services that reduce reliance on products that are being over-produced: non-food crops, conservation cropping, organic farming, recreation and small-scale industry
Double cropping
The practice of consecutively producing two crops of either like or unlike commodities on the same land within the same year. An example of double cropping might be to harvest a wheat crop by early summer and then plant corn or soybeans on that acreage for harvest in the fall. This practice is only possible in regions with long growing seasons.
Drainage
Improving the productivity of agricultural land by removing excess water from the soil by such means as ditches, drainage wells, or subsurface drainage tiles.
Drift netting
nets supported by floats catch species such as tuna and herring but also catch by-catch species e.g. dolphins, whales, turtles and sharks.
E. coli 0157:H7 (Escherichia Coli 0157:H7)
A bacterium that lives harmlessly in the intestines of animals such as cattle, reptiles, and birds. However, in humans the bacterium, which can be transmitted through foods, can cause bloody diarrhea, and also lead to hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), a life threatening disease. Although other known strains of E. coli are thought to be harmless to humans, the 0157:H7 strain is particularly virulent and dangerous. It has been implicated in several major outbreaks of food borne illness in recent years.
Effluent
Waste, usually liquid, released or discharged to the environment. Generally the term refers to point source discharges of sewage or contaminated waste waters into surface waters.
El Niño
A cyclical disruption of the ocean-atmosphere system in the tropical Pacific that has important consequences for global weather, including increased rainfall in the southern United States and Peru, and drought in the western Pacific. El Niño conditions result in a rise in sea surface temperature and a decline in primary productivity, which can affect higher levels of the ocean's foodchain, including commercial fishing.
Endangered species
 Species of animals or plants likely to go extinct in the foreseeable future unless current trends are altered. They are listed by regulation under the Endangered Species Act and assigned the Act’s highest level of protection.
Energy Ratio

Energy Ratio is calculated as the energy output (harvested yield) per unit of energy input (from all sources) This enables comparison of  the energy ratios of different agricultural production systems and different crop plants and animals.
Erosion (erodibility) index (EI)
The erosion (sometimes called erodibility) index is created by dividing potential erosion (from all sources except gully erosion) by the T value, which is the rate of soil erosion above which long term productivity may be adversely affected. The erodibility index is used in the conservation compliance and Conservation Reserve Programs. For example, one of the eligibility requirements for the CRP is that land have an EI greater than 8.
Ethanol
C2H5OH; the alcohol product of carbohydrate fermentation used in alcoholic beverages and for industrial purposes (also known as ethyl alcohol or grain alcohol). It is blended with gasoline to make gasohol. In the 1998/99 corn marketing year, about 540 million bushels
European Union
The EU attempts to unify and integrate 15 member economies by establishing a customs union and common economic policies, including CAP. Member nations include Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
Eutrophication
The process by which a body of water acquires a high concentration of plant nutrients, especially nitrates or phosphates. This nutrification promotes algae growth that, when it dies, can lead to the depletion of dissolved oxygen, killing fish and other aquatic organisms. While eutrophication is a natural, slow-aging process for a body of water, human activities can greatly accelerate the process.
Evapotranspiration
The loss of water from the soil both by evaporation and by transpiration from the plants growing in the soil.
Exotic species
A species that is not native to a region
Export subsidy
A direct or indirect compensation provided by government to private commercial firms to promote exports of domestic products. Article 16 of the GATT considers that export subsidies are unfair competition and allows countervailing duties to be imposed on subsidized products. Indirect methods of export subsidization include government subsidized financing for exports, export promotion and information activities, tax benefits, or other forms of assistance that may lead to lower than normal costs for exported products. The Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture imposes limits on agricultural export subsidies.
Extensive systems
spread the inputs over a larger area. Yield per unit area is lower, but the yield per unit input is higher. E.g. cattle ranching in Australia, upland sheep farming in the UK, cereal growing in Australia
Factory ships
these allow the processing and preservation of large quantities of fish which allows fishing fleets to operate far from their home ports. Long-distance fleets use a lot of fuel
Fallow cropland
Cropland left idle during the growing season. It may be tilled or sprayed to control weeds and conserve moisture in the soil.
Farm inputs
The resources that are used in farm production, such as chemicals, equipment, feed, seed, and energy. Most farm inputs are purchased (a change from the days when animals powered most operations), making production costs susceptible to nonfarm economic conditions. Over time, prices of farm inputs have increased relative to commodity prices, creating what farmers describe as a cost-price squeeze.
Farmers Market
-A market where producers, generally farmers, sell their goods directly to consumers.
Feed grain
Any of several grains most commonly used for livestock feed, including corn, grain sorghum, oats, rye, and barley. These grains and the farms producing them historically have received federal price and income support. They qualify as contract commodities and receive production flexibility contract payments.
Fertilizer
Any organic or inorganic material, either natural or synthetic, used to supply elements (such as nitrogen, phosphate and potash) essential for plant growth. If used in excess or attached to eroding soil, fertilizers can become a source of water pollution. 
Fish farming
Usually, freshwater commercial aquaculture; catfish farms are an example.
Foot-and-mouth disease
 (FMD) - A major disease of cloven-footed animals (e.g., cattle and pigs) that does not exist in the United States. The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service conducts a surveillance program to track the disease in foreign countries, regulates the importation of animal products from countries where FMD exists, and tests imported animals in quarantine.
Forage
Vegetable matter, fresh or preserved, that is gathered and fed to animals as roughage includes alfalfa hay, corn silage, and other hay crops.
Free market
A system in which the market forces of supply and demand determine prices and allocate available supplies, without government intervention. The concept of a free-market approach in agricultural policy, in its purest form, is no government price and income support programs, supply management programs, export subsidies, or barriers to international trade.
Free Trade Agreement of the Americas
 (FTAA) - A proposed multilateral agreement that would establish free trade in all products, including agricultural products, for all the countries of the Western Hemisphere, except Cuba. Launched at the Summit of the Americas in Santiago, Chile, in March 1998, the negotiations to establish the FTAA are expected to be completed by 2005.
Fumigant
A vaporized pesticide used to control pests in soil, buildings and greenhouses, and chambers holding products such as fruits to be treated. Methyl bromide is an example.
Fungicide
Any pesticide used to control, deter, or destroy fungi, which are forms of plant life (including molds and yeasts) that lack chlorophyll and are unable to make their own food (such as the plant pathogen, powdery mildew).
Furrow irrigation
Small, shallow channels guide water across the surface of a leveled field. Crops are typically grown on a ridge or raised bed between the furrows. This is the major irrigation system that is based on gravity.
Gasohol
Registered trade name for a blend consisting of 90% unleaded gasoline and 10% fermentation ethanol. Gasohol emissions contain less carbon monoxide than those from gasoline.
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
 An agreement originally negotiated in Geneva, Switzerland in 1947 to increase international trade by reducing tariffs and nontariff trade barriers. The agreement provides a code of conduct for international commerce and a framework for periodic multilateral negotiations on trade liberalization and expansion. The Uruguay Round Agreement (resulting from negotiations that stretched from 1986 through 1993 among over 100 nations) established the World Trade Organization (WTO) to replace the institutions created by the GATT. The WTO officially replaced the GATT institutions on January 1, 1995.
Genetic engineering
The use of recombinant DNA or other specific molecular gene transfer or exchange techniques to add desirable traits to plants, animals, or other organisms, or to enhance biological processes. Organisms modified by genetic engineering are sometimes referred to as transgenic, bioengineered, or genetically modified.
Genetically Modified Organisms
(GMO) - A term, currently used most often in international trade discussions, that designates crops that carry new traits that have been inserted through advanced genetic engineering methods (e.g., Flavr Saver tomato, Roundup Ready soybeans). GMO crops are meeting resistance from some trading partners, particularly the European Union, that are responding in turn to consumer concerns over public health and environmental safety aspects of GMOs.
Genome
All the genetic material in the chromosomes of a particular organism. USDA’s research agencies have a Plant Genome Mapping Program to identify, characterize, and map the position of agriculturally important genes on the chromosomes of plants grown as crops or trees in order to better use these genes for improving the characteristics of the plant (resistance to disease, higher yields, etc.) through breeding.
Geographic Information System
 (GIS) - Computerized systems used to compile, retrieve, analyze, and display spatially referenced data. Farming activities that utilize GIS typically include harvesting, fertilizing, pest control, seeding, and irrigation. Use of GIS is called precision farming.
Ghost fishing nets
fishing nets that have been left or lost in the ocean by fishermen.
Global Positioning System
 (GPS) - A network of satellites that can be used by ground-based units to precisely determine their location by latitude and longitude. GPS is part of the infrastructure required to operate geographic information systems that are used to practice precision farming.
Green manure
Any crop or plant grown and plowed under to improve the soil, by adding organic matter and subsequently releasing plant nutrients, especially nitrogen.
G-7
Group of Seven - An international economic forum, established in 1975, for leaders of the seven largest industrial countries (France, the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, Italy, and Canada). The focus of G-7 discussions has been coordination of macroeconomic policies and international trade and monetary policies.
Growing season
The time period, usually measured in days, between the last freeze in the spring and the first frost in the fall. Growing seasons vary depending on local climate and geography. It can also vary by crop, as different plants have different freezing thresholds. It also is an important component in defining wetland areas.
Gully erosion
Also called ephemeral gully erosion, this process occurs when water flows in narrow channels during or immediately after heavy rains or melting snow. A gully is sufficiently deep that it would not be routinely destroyed by tillage operations whereas rill erosion is smoothed by ordinary farm tillage. The narrow channels, or gullies, may be of considerable depth , ranging from 1 to 2 feet to as much as 75 to 100 feet.
Hectare
(ha) - A metric measure of area equal to 10,000 square meters. One hectare=2.47 acres. One acre=0.405 hectares.
Herbicide
Any pesticide used to destroy or inhibit plant growth; a weed killer.
Horticulture
specialty crops - bedding plants, florists’ greens, flower and vegetable seeds, flowers, foliage, fruit stocks, nursery and ornamental plants, mushrooms, and vegetables grown under cover (e.g., in greenhouses).
Humus
The well decomposed, relatively stable portion of the partly or wholly decayed organic matter in a soil, which provides nutrients and helps the soil retain moisture.
Hydroponics
The growing of plants without soil by using an inert medium such as sand, peat, or vermiculite and adding a nutrient solution containing all the essential elements needed by the plant for its normal growth and development. Water culture, when plant roots are suspended in a liquid medium containing the nutrient solution while their crowns are supported in a thin layer of inert medium, is true hydroponics. Often called soilless culture, it also includes aeroponics where plant roots are suspended in a dark chamber and sprayed with the nutrient solution.
Industrial crops
Crops that primarily have industrial applications in contrast to food or livestock feed uses. Industrial uses account for a relatively small but a growing and potentially much larger share of the market for farm commodities. Some of the industrial and experimental crops include: castor beans (lubricants, nylon, cosmetics); chia (cosmetics); crotalaria (fibers); cuphea (soap, surfactants); guar (food stiffeners, drilling muds, paper manufacturing); guayule (natural rubber and hypoallergenic latex products); hesperaloe (specialty pulp paper); kenaf (twine, fiberboard, carpet padding, newsprint); lesquerella (lubricants, cosmetics); meadowfoam (cosmetics, lubricants, water repellents); milkweed (insulated clothing, filler for comforters, nonwoven textiles) and plantago ovato (high fiber additive to laxatives). While maize is the primary feedstock for ethanol, it is not considered an industrial crop because nearly 95% of US production goes to feed uses.
Infiltration
The downward entry of water into soil. Also called percolation. A high rate of infiltration means that soil moisture for crops will be higher. Many conservation practices, such as conservation tillage, reduce rates of runoff and increase infiltration rates.
Infrastructure
The transportation network, communications systems, financial institutions, and other public and private services necessary for economic activity. Poorly developed in LEDCs
Insecticide
A pesticide used to kill, deter, or control insects.
International Monetary Fund
 (IMF) - A multilateral financial institution established in 1945 to help member countries with international payments problems and to maintain orderly exchange rate policies. Lends money to support LEDC development projects.
Intensive systems
achieve a high yield with high inputs on a limited area of land e.g. energy as labour or machinery materials as fertilisers, pesticides capital to pay for machinery, chemicals
Invasive species
Alien (non-native) species of plants, animals, and pests whose introduction causes or is likely to cause economic or environmental harm or harm to human health.
Irradiation
The process of exposing food or other items to radiation of various wavelengths in order to destroy contamination from undesirable organisms, achieve insect disinfestation or delay maturation. There are various types of irradiation treatments (gamma, x-ray and ultraviolet) with various characteristics and limitations to consider in building irradiation facilities.
Irrigation
Applying water (or wastewater) to land areas to supply the water (and sometimes nutrient) needs of plants. Techniques for irrigating include furrow irrigation, sprinkler irrigation, trickle (or drip) irrigation, and flooding.
E.g. USA About 51 million acres of land are irrigated in the United States. More acres of corn are irrigated than any other crop, but only about 15% of the harvested acres. In contrast, irrigation is used for 100% of rice, 81% of orchards, 64% of vegetables, and 36% of cotton. About 40% of freshwater withdrawals in the nation are for irrigation, making agriculture the single largest user of water. Nearly 90% of all irrigation water withdrawals are in the western states, where in some areas competition for available supplies among uses, including base stream flow, has become controversial. Consumptive use as a percent of withdrawals is about 61% for irrigation
La Niña -
a Cyclical disruption in the ocean-atmosphere system characterized by unusually cold ocean temperatures in the equatorial Pacific. These ocean conditions are just the opposite of El Niño; in latin La Niña means temperature fall
Leaching
The process by which chemicals are dissolved and transported through the soil by percolating water. Pesticides and nutrients from fertilizers or manures may leach from fields, areas of spills, or feedlots and thereby enter surface water, groundwater, or soil. Leaching from concentrated sources such as waste sites and loading areas vulnerable to spills can be prevented by paving or containment with a liner of relatively impermeable material designed to keep leachate inside a treatment pond, landfill, or a tailings disposal area. Liner materials include plastic and dense clay.
Legumes
A family of plants, including many valuable food, forage and cover species, such as peas, beans, soybeans, peanuts, clovers, alfalfas, sweet clovers, lupin, vetches, and kudzu. Sometimes referred to as nitrogen-fixing plants, they can convert nitrogen from the air to build up nitrogen in the soil. Legumes are an important rotation crop because of their nitrogen-fixing property.
Long-lining
Long fishing lines reduce the by catch of using nets but can catch other species on the hooks e.g. albatrosses, turtles and sharks
Malnutrition
A human condition that results from an excess, imbalance, or deficit of nutrients. It is generally defined as some measurable degree of ill health due to inadequate nutrition that can be prevented or cured by improved nutrition. Malnutrition can include starvation and result in protein deficiency, iodine-deficient goitres’, tooth decay, osteoporosis, and other conditions. It may also include obesity, some types of arteriosclerosis, hypertension due to excess sodium, anaemia’s due to lack or iron, folic acid, or vitamin B-12, as well as classic nutritional deficiencies that cause scurvy, beriberi, pellagra, kwashiorkor, and rickets.
Mariculture
The form of aquaculture where fish, shellfish, or aquatic plants are cultured in a salt water environment.
Maximum Sustainable Yield
(MSY) is the maximum harvest that will not reduce the ability of the population to replace losses
Methane
A gas created by anaerobic decomposition of organic compounds. Methane is a greenhouse gas Animal wastes,  cattle farts and padi rice fields are a major source of methane releases to the atmosphere.
Methanol
A liquid alcohol (also known as methyl alcohol or wood alcohol), formed in the destructive distillation of wood or made synthetically, and used especially as an alternative fuel, a gasoline additive, a solvent, an antifreeze, or a denaturant for ethyl alcohol. As a gasoline additive it lowers the carbon monoxide emissions but increases hydrocarbon emissions.
Migrant farmworker
A person who travels across intenational boundaries to do agricultural work of a seasonal or other temporary nature.
Minimum tillage
The minimum soil manipulation necessary for crop production. Conservation tillage, reduced tillage, and no-till farming are related terms.
Monoculture
A pattern of crop or tree production that relies on a single plant variety.
Mulching
Involves adding a layer of material on the soil surface. e.g. shredded crop waste or bark. It prevents the seeds of competitors from germinating or young plants from growing.
Multicropping
Growing two or more crops on a field at the same time, but with different planting and harvesting times, means the field is never completely exposed to wind and rain.
Nematode
Microscopic soil worm, which may attack roots or other structures of plants and cause extensive damage.
Nitrate
The nitrogen ion, NO3-, is derived from nitric acid and is an important source of nitrogen in fertilizers. Nitrate pollution of drinking water, shallow wells being particularly vulnerable, is of concern because infants are especially sensitive.
No-till farming
A method of planting crops that involves no seed bed preparation (ploughing) other than opening the soil to place individual seeds in holes or small slits; usually no cultivation during crop production; chemical weed control is normally used. May also be referred to as slot tillage or zero cultivation.
NGO
Non-Governmental Organization A private sector nonprofit organization. Some NGOs working in international development are accredited by the United Nations or its agencies.
NAFTA
North American Free Trade Agreement - involving Canada, Mexico and the U.S.
Noxious weeds
Undesirable plants that infest either land or water resources and cause physical and economic damage. E.g. Japanese knotweed
Ocean ranching
A type of aquaculture, used mainly by the salmon industry, which cultures juvenile fish, releases them to mature in the open ocean, and catches them when they return as adults to spawn.
Offal
The less valuable byproduct material from the preparation of a specific product; primarily refers to the byproducts of meat and poultry plants, e.g., blood, bone, feathers, fat.
Oilseed crops
Primarily soybeans, sunflower seed, canola, rapeseed, safflower, flaxseed, mustard seed, peanuts and cottonseed, used for the production of cooking oils, protein meals for livestock, and industrial uses. Other oilseed crops include castor beans and sesame.
Organic
Chemically, a compound or molecule containing carbon bound to hydrogen. Organic compounds make up all living matter. The term organic frequently is used to distinguish "natural" products or processes from man-made "synthetic" ones. Thus natural fertilizers include manures or rock phosphate, as opposed to fertilizers synthesized from chemical feedstocks.
Organic farming
There is no universally accepted definition, but in general organic farming is a production system which avoids or largely excludes the use of synthetically compounded fertilizers, pesticides, growth regulators, and livestock feed additives. To the maximum extent feasible, organic farming systems rely on crop rotation, crop residues, animal manures, legumes, green manure, off-farm organic wastes, mechanical cultivation, mineral bearing rocks, and aspects or biological pest control to maintain soil productivity, to supply plant nutrients and to control weeds, insects and other pests.
Pastureland
Land used primarily for the production of domesticated forage plants for livestock
Perishable commodities
Farm goods that prior to processing cannot be stored for a substantial period of time without excessive loss through deterioration or spoilage. Examples of perishable commodities are fresh fruits and vegetables, meat and poultry.
Permanent vegetative cover
Trees, or perennial grasses, legumes, or shrubs with an expected life span of at least 5 years.
Pest
An animal or plant that is directly or indirectly detrimental to human interests, causing harm or reducing the quality and value of a harvestable crop or other resource. Weeds, termites, rats, and mildew are examples of pests.
Pesticide
A substance used to kill, control, repel, or mitigate any pest. Insecticides, fungicides, rodenticides, herbicides, and germicides are all pesticides.
pH
An expression of the intensity of the basic or acidic condition of a liquid or of soil; the logarithmic scale ranges from 0 to 14, where 0 is the most acid, 7 is neutral, and above 7 is alkaline. Natural waters usually have a pH between 6.5 and 8.5. Plants have differing tolerances for acidity and alkalinity.
Phosphorus
An essential nutrient for plants and animals that is commonly applied to crops as a phosphate fertilizer. Phosphorus can contribute to the eutrophication of lakes and other water bodies. Sources of excess phosphorus include sewage and agricultural runoff.
Point source pollution
A source of pollution from a discernable, confined and discrete conveyance, including but not limited to any pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel, conduit, well, discrete fissure, container, rolling stock, concentrated animal feeding operation, from which pollutants are or may be discharged.
Polyculture
AKA Companion crops- This involves growing combinations of crops to maximize production. One crop may benefit another by creating a microclimate, providing nutrients, distracting pests, deterring pests or supporting pollinators. E.g. banana trees protect coffee bushes from extremes of tropical climates. In the Philippines, banana, maize, peppers and sweet potatoes are grown together.
Precision farming
Farmers use global positioning (GPS) technology involving satellites and sensors on the ground and intensive information management tools to understand variations in resource conditions within fields. They use this information to more precisely apply fertilizers and other inputs and to more accurately predict crop yields.
Predator habitats
Habitats can be provided for the natural predators of pests. E.g. hedgerows, beetle banks
Purse seining
a net is cast around a shoal of fish, drawn tight then pulled in. It is possible to selectively catch particular species. E.g. tuna, mackerel, sardines,
Quarantine
A restraint on importation of certain animals or plants from areas where pests or contagious diseases are endemic — or isolation of animals or plants suspected of carrying pests or diseases — to prevent the spread of those pests and diseases.
Quota
A limit imposed by governments on the quantity of goods produced or purchased.
Rill erosion
An erosion process in which numerous small channels, typically a few inches deep, are formed. It occurs mainly on recently cultivated soils or on recent cuts and fills.
Riparian buffer
A strip of vegetation along the bank of a body of water which slows the rate of flow of runoff from adjoining uplands, causing sediment and other materials to fall out onto the land before the runoff enters and pollutes the body of water.
Rodenticide
A pesticide used to destroy, control, or deter mice and rats or other rodent pests from damaging food, crops,
Sedimentation
The depositing of eroded soil at some other location, generally in the bed of a stream, river or lake. Sediment may carry with it pesticides and nutrients attached to the soil. Sedimentation is the single largest source of nonpoint pollution.
Seed bank
A facility used for the preservation and dissemination of seed, particularly varieties that are not in commercial use and that may be threatened with extinction.
Set-aside
A programme (not used since the late 1970s) under which farmers are required to set aside a certain percentage of their total planted acreage and devote this land to approved conservation uses (such as grasses, legumes, and small grain which is not allowed to mature) in order to be eligible for grants- EU CAP policy.
Sharecropper
A tenant farmer who receives a share of the crops, livestock, or livestock products from the landowner, who in turn may extend credit to and supervises the tenant. The tenant generally supplies only labour.
Sheet erosion
The removal of a thin, relatively uniform layer of soil from the land surface caused by runoff.
Shelterbelt
A plant barrier of trees, shrubs, or other approved perennial vegetation designed to reduce wind erosion. AKA windbreak.
Silage
Prepared by chopping green forage (grass, legumes, field corn, etc.) into an airtight chamber, where it is compressed to exclude air and undergoes an acid fermentation that retards spoilage. Contains about 65 percent moisture. Fed to animals in winter.
Silviculture
A branch of forestry dealing with the development and care of forests.
Soil solarization
Fumigating and warming soil by covering it with black plastic. This is an alternative pest control technique
Solid waste
Non-liquid, non-soluble materials ranging from municipal rubbish to industrial wastes that contain complex and sometimes hazardous substances. Solid wastes also include sewage sludge, agricultural refuse, demolition wastes, and mining residues. Technically, solid waste also refers to liquids and gases in containers.
Specialty crops
Usually refers to crops covered by marketing orders that generally are not fruits or vegetables. Specialty crops have included almonds, heroine poppies, walnuts, spearmint oil, hops, dates, raisins, and prunes.
Species
Species represent the lowest and most important of the primary groupings used in classifying plants, animals, and microorganisms. While no single definition applies to all organisms, biologists rely principally on (1) morphological and genetic similarities and (2), for sexually reproducing organisms, the capability of interbreeding with one another but not other groups. If different species do interbreed, the offspring, if any, are often sterile.
Staple
A commodity that is widely and regularly produced and consumed e.g. wheat, rice, potatoes
Stocking rate
The number of specific kinds and classes of livestock grazing or using a unit of land for a specified time. Not the same as carrying capacity.
Strip cropping
Growing crops in a systematic arrangement of strips or bands, usually parallel to the land’s contour, that serve as barriers to wind and water erosion. By planting different crops in neighbouring long narrow fields with different planting and harvesting times means the field is never completely exposed to wind and rain.
Stubble mulching
Leaving the stubble or crop residue essentially in place on the land as a surface cover during a fallow period. Stubble-mulching can prevent erosion from wind or water and conserve soil moisture.
Subsistence farm
A low-income farm where the emphasis is on production for use of the operator and the operator's family rather than for sale.
Surplus
The amount by which available supplies are greater than the quantity that will bring producers an adequate income.
Sustainable Agriculture
A systematic approach to agriculture that focuses on ensuring the long-term productivity of human and natural resources for meeting food and fibre needs.
Sustainable development
Development pursued in a manner that does not damage or deplete the human or physical environment and that ensures through good management that resources will be available for use indefinitely.
Sustained yield
An output of renewable resources that does not impair the productivity of the resource; it implies a balance between harvesting and incremental growth or replenishment.
Terminator seeds
A descriptive term used by some for seeds that have been genetically engineered to produce a crop whose first generation produces sterile seeds, thus preventing a second generation from being grown from seeds saved from the first. Opponents are concerned that the technology could have harmful environmental and public health effects and argue that it would have an inequitable impact on farmers in developing countries who rely on saved seed for replanting and for developing locally adapted varieties.
Terrace
An embankment, ridge, or levelled strip constructed across sloping soils on the contour, or at right angle to the slope. The terrace intercepts surface runoff so that it can soak into the soil or flow slowly to a prepared outlet, decreasing rates of soil erosion.
Trade barriers

Restricting imports can protect national production but can inhibit the development of agricultural activities in other countries, such as LEDCs that could have benefited economically from increased exports.
Trawling
pulling a bag-shaped net through the sea is an unselective method and can catch a wide variety of species, including non-target species (by-catch). Trawling on the seabed can also cause great physical damage e.g. to coral, seaweed beds. Midwater trawls have lower by-catch but can kill some non-target organisms e.g. porpoises caught in bass trawls
Trickle irrigation
AKA drip irrigation - Method in which water drips to the soil from perforated tubes or emitters. This irrigation technology is water conserving compared to flooding, furrows, and sprinklers.
Turgidity
Turgor Pressure or turgidity is the main pressure of the cell contents against the cell wall in plant cells. This force gives the plant rigidity, and keeps it erect. Without water plants wilt.
Universal soil loss equation
USLE Is a formula that can be used to estimate the rate of soil erosion based on the effect of a range of climatic, edaphic and land use factors. A = R x K x L x S x C x P
Where: A = the rate of erosion R = rainfall erosivity factor K = soil erodibility factor L = slope length factor S = slope gradient factor C = cropping management factor P = erosion prevention factor
Vegetative cover
Perennial grasses, legumes, or shrubs with an expected lifespan of 5 years, or trees.
Viticulture
The science and practice of growing grapes.
Windbreak
A living barrier that usually includes several rows of trees, and perhaps shrubs, located upwind of a farm, field, feedlot or other area and intended to reduce wind velocities. Windbreaks, AKA shelterbelts, can reduce wind erosion, conserve energy or moisture, control snow accumulations, and provide shelter for livestock or wildlife
Wind erosion -
The detachment and transportation of soil by wind. Wind erosion is a cropland management concern in the USA Plains states.
World Bank
A multilateral economic development institution established in 1945 to extend loans and technical assistance for development projects in developing countries. It is formally referred to as the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
World Food Programme
 (WFP) - A UN agency that contributes commodities, services, and cash to developing countries to meet emergency food needs or to carry out economic and social development projects using food or local currencies generated from the sale of food aid commodities.
World Trade Organization
 (WTO) - The international organization established by the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations to oversee implementation of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
Yield
The number of or Kg that a farmer harvests per hectare.
Zero tolerance
In food safety policy, a "zero tolerance" standard generally means that if a potentially dangerous substance (whether microbiological, chemical, or other) is present in or on a product, that product will be considered adulterated and unfit for human consumption.
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