US Agricultural Patterns

31
US Agricultural Patterns

description

US Agricultural Patterns. Livestock Patterns. Cows -- Dairy and Beef. Notice how Beef cows are so widely dispersed. http://www.nal.usda.gov/awic/pubs/Beef/beef.htm. But beef cattle in feedlots are more highly concentrated. What are you more likely to see in Iowa, cows or pigs?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of US Agricultural Patterns

Page 1: US Agricultural Patterns

US Agricultural Patterns

Page 2: US Agricultural Patterns

Livestock Patterns• Cows -- Dairy and Beef

Page 3: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 4: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 5: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 6: US Agricultural Patterns

Notice how Beef cows are so widely dispersed.

Page 7: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 8: US Agricultural Patterns

http://www.nal.usda.gov/awic/pubs/Beef/beef.htm

Page 9: US Agricultural Patterns

But beef cattle in feedlots are more highly concentrated.

Page 10: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 11: US Agricultural Patterns

What are you more likely to see in Iowa, cows or pigs?

Page 12: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 13: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 14: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 15: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 16: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 17: US Agricultural Patterns

Crop Patterns

• Climate of North America (US)

• Corn, Soybeans, Sorghum, Citrus, Cotton, Wheat

Page 18: US Agricultural Patterns

http://images.encarta.msn.com/xrefmedia/aencmed/targets/maps/map/T048696A.gif

Page 19: US Agricultural Patterns

http://www.worldbook.com/wb/images/content_spotlight/climates/north_america_climate.gif

Page 20: US Agricultural Patterns

http://www.wrcc.dri.edu/pcpn/us_precip.gif

Page 21: US Agricultural Patterns

Does this match with your Act.K map?

Page 22: US Agricultural Patterns

Why does this map of Soybeans so closely match the corn map?

Page 23: US Agricultural Patterns

Corn – Soybean Crop Rotation

• It’s all about the nitrogen—a critical element for all life

• Corn draws nitrogen from the soil (and air) and it gets used and stored in the plant and especially the kernels.

• Soybeans draw nitrogen from the air and store it in nodules in the root system. When the plant dies, that nitrogen remains in the soil.

Page 24: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 25: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 26: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 27: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 28: US Agricultural Patterns
Page 29: US Agricultural Patterns

Does this match your Act.K map? (notice the next map)

Page 30: US Agricultural Patterns

Notice the irrigation in western Kansas and Texas

Page 31: US Agricultural Patterns