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Exercises             
Farming           
     
    Most types of farming produce food for people to eat. Farmers           
  make the best use they can of natural resources (such as soil and climate) to           
  produce crops and rear animals. Different types of plants and animals need different           
  conditions to grow well in and there is a variety of types of farming around           
  the world.             
            
    Dairy farming and mixed farming  Dairy farming produces milk, butter and cheese             
  from cows that graze in grassy fields. Dairy farms are usually quite close to             
  large cities so that fresh milk can quickly reach people’s kitchens.               
    Mixed farming involves both crops and . The main area is the          
corn-belt            
  of the mid-west USA. Here farmers grow corn to feed pigs and cattle. Oats and            
  hay are also grown as feed, as well as other crops such as soy beans and wheat.            
  Mixed farming is found in Europe, too, in a region that stretches from northern            
  Portugal and Spain across France, Germany and Poland and into Russia. In Britain            
  mixed farms are found from Devon across the counties of the Midlands.              
    Mediterranean farming is found in areas with a Mediterranean climate where            
  winters are mild, summers long and dry and rainfall is quite low. These areas            
  are around the Mediterranean Sea, and also in California, Chile, South Africa            
  and Australia. Winter crops include wheat and barley. Summer crops include peaches,            
  citrus fruits, tomatoes, grapes and olives.              
    Shifting cultivation is a common type of farming in many tropical countries.             
  It is different from settled farming because shifting cultivators raise crops             
  in a place for only as long as the soil allows the crops to grow well. After             
  a year or so in one place the farmer moves on, cuts the natural vegetation from             
  another area, and leaves the first plot to return to its natural state. Shifting             
  cultivation is practiced in the tropical forests of Central and South America, Africa and south-east Asia. Farmers grow maize, rice, manioc,             
  yams, millet and other food crops.              
           
             
          
          
         
    Pastures and cattle ranges  Much of the beef in hamburgers eaten in North America             
  comes from cattle that graze in Central and South America. To expand cattle-ranching,             
  tropical forests have been cut down to provide grasslands for "hamburger     
cattle".             
  Cattle also graze on natural grasslands such as the  of Argentina, where             
  cattle have been herded by "gauchos" on horseback for more than a hundred years.     
            
           
    In countries where intensive farming is practiced, such as Britain, some cattle           
  are not only fattened on pastures. They  that make their bodies produce more meat.           
  Where this is not done the farming          
  is "extensive" rather than "intensive", as quite large areas of grassland           
  are needed to fatten one cow. In parts of East Africa where grasslands are not           
  good enough to feed cattle all the year round, farmers have to move their herds           
  with the seasons to find new grasslands.              
             
    Farm animals  Sheep, cattle, pigs, chickens and goats are all farm animals.             
  Sheep are kept both for their meat and for their wool. A farmer or shepherd             
  leaves sheep to graze on grasslands. Dogs often help to round up the sheep and             
  to protect them and their lambs from wild animals such as wolves and eagles.             
  Sheep are often reared on grasslands that cannot be used for other types of             
  farming because they are too steep or too dry. Lamb and mutton are popular meats             
  in many regions of the Middle East. You would rarely see pigs kept on farms             
  in the Middle East, however, because most people there are Muslims and do not             
  eat pork. Chickens are found on farms in many regions of the world. In Western             
  Europe and North America large numbers of chickens are kept indoors in row upon             
  row of small cages, often never seeing the light of day. The farmer feeds these     
"     
hens" each day and collects their eggs.     
             
             
    Intensive farming  Battery hens are an example of intensive farming: farmers             
  organize their animals and crops to get the maximum food from them. Intensive             
  farming uses a lot of machinery to make it more efficient. Tractors are used             
  to plough  fields             
  and plant seeds, and chemical fertilizers make plants grow stronger, while pesticides             
  kill pests and herbicides kill weeds. In North America the wheat belt, stretching             
  from the USA into the Canadian prairies, is a large area of intensive farming             
  where the wheat is harvested with combine harvesters.               
              
    Grain farming  Grain (cereals) is the most important food source for most people             
  in the world. The main types of grain are wheat, corn (maize), and rice. The             
  USA, Argentina, Australia and Russia are the main world areas of wheat production.             
  Farming in these countries is mostly intensive. Farmers use machines, fertilizers,             
  pesticides and herbicides on large wheat fields. This intensive farming means             
  that the amount of grain produced from a hectare of field (its     
"yield") in North             
  America is over four times that produced from a hectare in Africa. The USA is             
  the world’s biggest exporter of grain. Nearly every African country imports             
  grain. Grain is also used for animal fodder.             
             
    The Green Revolution  In           
  the 1960s special international efforts were made to breed new crop varieties           
  that would produce better yields. This would produce more food from an average           
  field to feed the fast-growing populations of tropical countries. Scientists           
  were successful in breeding high-yield types of wheat and rice. This has become           
  known as the “Green Revolution”. In India, China, Mexico, the Philippines and           
  other parts of south-east Asia the production of these foods has risen quickly.           
  Some of the new rice types, for example, yield three times as much rice per           
  hectare as traditional types. They also grow more quickly, allowing two or three           
  crops a year from land that used to produce only one crop.             
    There are problems, however. The           
  new varieties of plants need fertilizers and pesticides if they are to grow          
  well and resist diseases. Not all farmers can afford these chemicals, which           
  also cause pollution of soil and water.              
             
    Organic farming  Farmers who choose to farm organically do not use chemicals             
  on their land. Fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides can cause problems. They             
  kill plants and animals that the farmer does not want to kill, and very small             
  traces of the chemicals may be left in crops, which may make them dangerous             
  to eat.               
             
  farming uses            
  and manure from farm animals to fertilize the land, and other plants, such as           
  garlic, to control insects. Animals           
  kept on organic farms are allowed to roam in the open air and are not locked          
  up in cages for long periods. Organic farming has grown in the USA and Europe           
  as farmers have realized some of the problems of intensive farming. Many people           
  believe that food grown organically tastes better and is safer than food produced           
  by intensive methods.            
            
    Farms of the future  Some of the problems of poor weather can be solved by breeding             
  special new crops that are not so spoiled by frost or certain pests. This sort             
  of breeding, using "plant ", is going to become more and more common             
  in farming in the future.               
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