In addition to the climate and soil resources for crop production, many socioeconomic factors influence which crops farmers chose to cultivate, including production costs, domestic and international market demand; and government policies that subsidize agricultural producers, and reduce trade barriers or export costs. As discussed in Module 3, the protein, energy, fat, vitamins, and micro-nutrients of crops for human nutrition are one predictor of the market value of a crop. However some food crops are highly valued and cultivated for their cultural and culinary qualities, such as flavor (ex. chilies, vanilla, coffee, wine grapes); and their high economic value often reflects high production and processing costs, as well as market demand for their unique culinary and cultural properties.
Some crops are cultivated for non-human food uses such as livestock feed, biofuel, fiber, industrial oil and starch, and medicinal uses. Crop processing often creates by-products that can be used for other purposes, adding market value. For example, when oil is extracted from oilseeds such as soybean, the soybean meal by-product is high in protein and sold for livestock feed or added to human food products. And for crops that are cultivated on many acres often with support from government policies, the consistent, abundant supply of these commodity crops has contributed to the development of multiple processing technologies, uses, and markets. To better understand factors that contribute to the production of commodity crops, we will now examine two case studies of corn and sugarcane.
In the following two agricultural crop case studies, you will have the opportunity to apply your understanding of crop plant life cycles, classification systems, and crop adaption to climatic conditions to understand how plant ecological features and human socioeconomic factors influence which crops are some of the major crops produced in the world.
Corn or maize is a summer annual C4 crop in the Poaceae, or grass family that has high nutrient demands. Unless soil conservation practices are used, corn fields do not have live roots protecting the soil from erosion and providing other soil quality benefits after harvest in the fall, winter and spring. The US is the largest corn producer in the world. Soils and climate, particularly in the Midwest, permit high corn yields; and significant investment in agricultural research has produced high-yielding corn hybrids and production technologies, such as fertilizers, pest control practices, farming equipment, and irrigation. Research has also developed diverse uses for the large quantities of corn produced in the US, and the US is also a major exporter of corn.
Read this overview of US corn production and uses from the US Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, Corn and Other Feed Grains [1].
The US consumes the most sweeteners of any country in the world. In the US, high-fructose syrup is made from corn, which has displaced some sugarcane production for sugar for the US market. Sugarcane production, however, has continued to increase in Brazil, the biggest sugarcane producer in the world. Sugarcane is a C4 perennial crop in the grass family and it's not grown just for sugar as a food sweetener.
Watch this United Nations video below, about the factors contributing to increased sugarcane production and some of the consequences. Then answer the questions below.
If the video does not play, please see Brazil: The ethanol revolution (United Nations) [2].