Posts Tagged ‘Agronomics’

Jeff Hill is a professional agronomist passionate about biology and nature.

Most of the living soil is invisible to a naked human eye. However, you can see relatively big living organisms such as earthworms and spiders. The soil ecosystem is extremely interconnected. This is why the living soil visible to the human eye can give you a great indication about the much greater number of living organisms that you can’t see without a microscope. This is why a simple count of the number of ants, spiders, worms and termites in a handful of soil can tell you how well your soil is doing.

Jeff HillIt is better to have such counts when soil organisms are at the peak of their activities. This happens when the soil is in the perfect condition: not too dry, not too wet, not too cold, not too hot. Mid-spring and mid-fall are great times for such measurements and counts. Dig a shovel of soil. Drop it on a white material to make counting easy. A piece of poster board or a white sheet of paper would work great for this task. Break the soil apart and carefully inspect it. Count the number of different living creatures that you will encounter. Termites and spiders usually move very fast, so you need to count quickly.

You don’t need to know the names of all the species that you encounter. It suffices to count the number of different types. Generally speaking, a soil is healthy when you can see three or more representatives of three or more types of soil organisms within two to four minutes, says Jeff Hill.

Agronomics, or agricultural economics, specifically focuses on optimizing and streamlining the methods by which food is produced and distributed. Jeff Hill, who is a licensed agriculture irrigation specialist and crop advisor shares how incredibly important it is that farmers, and quite simply, the general public, understand these basic concepts.

Agricultural economics is always focusing on improving the sustainability of land use. By implementing tools for optimizing land management, erosion prevention, pest management, and more, agronomists focus on a great deal of complex relationships that must work in harmony to create a healthy, balanced, and successful operation.

Jeff Hill

Jeff Hill

Agronomics also focuses on the real-life implications of decision-making and risks that happen at the farm level. With decreasing production levels, specialists aim to address and innovate these decisions to ensure that farmers are making the best choices regarding methodology, technology, and policies.

While agricultural economics have historically focused more on smaller-scale concepts, recently a priority has been placed on the over-arching concept of food consumption by analyzing the varied effects of pricing and the relationship between quality and consumer choices. Being a psychologically-driven area of the field, agronomists strive to understand the intricate relationship between what is being sold and what actually makes it home into the refrigerator. This also functions in the context of implementing new ways to bring more food to impoverished areas of the world where these systems can be interrupted or even entirely dysfunctional.

Jeff Hill is based in Clovis, California. He always looks forward to meeting new clients.

Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_economics