Green Revolution
Soil Science
IPM
Regenerative Farming
Water Management
100

What was the switch from manual and animal labor in farming to the use of machinery ?

Mechanization

100

This is the smallest particle size in the mineral composition of soil.

Clay

100

A method of pest management that includes introducing a beneficial organism that predates on agricultural pests

Biocontrol or Biological Control

100

A method of soil management that does not use equipment to disturb the soil

No-Till

100

This form of irrigation conserves the most water, and can target individual plants

Drip Irrigation

200

The practice of growing the same crop in a single area for multiple seasons. This necessitates heavy fertilizer use.

Monocropping

200

What are the top 3 plant essential nutrients?

NPK

200

The practice of intentionally changing the type of crops planted on a given section of land from season to season in an effort to control populations of pests that have a preference for a certain crop

Crop Rotation

200

Planting this preserves the physical integrity of soil throughout the year, and can boost nutrients that have been lost in prior seasons

Cover cropping

200

This occurs when nitrogen and phosphorous rich fertilizers leech into a body of water, and cause ruinous algae blooms that can result in dead zones

Eutrophication 

300

Plants whose genetic makeup has been altered in a laboratory in a way that could not be repeated in nature.

GMOs

300

The levels of soil that separate into distinct layers. The combination of these layers create a "soil profile", and analysis can determine how viable a soil is for farming.  

Soil Horizon

300

The point at which a pest population has grown to a size where an intervention must be made

Action Threshold

300

Regenerative farmers try to increase this by diversifying plantings and mimicking habitats to invite diversified life into their fields

Biodiversity

300

A stepped agricultural installation that is designed to slow the speed of runoff, and reduce erosion

Terracing

400

What are two things pesticides can help control besides mammals and insects?

Weeds and fungi

400

This practice disturbs soil to control weeds and add nutritional amendments. Its longterm practice can demolish the microbial life in a soil, and intensify erosion.

Tillage

400

Examples of this include building a fence to protect against deer, picking caterpillars off leaves, removing a pest damaged plant from an area of healthy plants.

Physical Control

400

Placing these over fields can prevent erosion and give a boost to microbial life in the soil

Leaves

400

Using this can prevent water loss from evaporation, and helps control weeds

Mulch

500

This is the process, developed in the early 20th century, by which plant available nitrogen is synthesized in conventional fertilizers

Haber-Bosch process

500

Name all of the soil horizons in order

O (organic layer), A (topsoil), E (eluviation layer), B (subsoil), C (parent material), R (bedrock) 

500

The practice of diversifying crops planted in an area in an effort to support the existing organisms in an ecosystem that control pest populations.

Intercropping or interplanting

500

What is the main form of nutritional amendment used at Holly Hill Farm?

Compost

500

What equipment is used at Holly Hill Farm to reduce usage of town or groundwater in our gardens?

rain barrels