食物腐败
化石燃料
农业
自然资源经济学
生产力
环境科学
食物系统
粮食安全
人口
业务
生态学
生物
经济
遗传学
细菌
人口学
宏观经济学
社会学
作者
Sean T. Hammond,James H. Brown,Joseph R. Burger,Tatiana Flanagan,Trevor S. Fristoe,Norman Mercado‐Silva,Jeffrey C. Nekola,Jordan G. Okie
出处
期刊:BioScience
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2015-06-26
卷期号:65 (8): 758-768
被引量:184
标识
DOI:10.1093/biosci/biv081
摘要
Human societies have always faced temporal and spatial fluctuations in food availability. The length of time that food remains edible and nutritious depends on temperature, moisture, and other factors that affect the growth rates of organisms that cause spoilage. Some storage techniques, such as drying, salting, and smoking, date back to ancient hunter–gatherer and early agricultural societies and use relatively low energy inputs. Newer technologies developed since the industrial revolution, such as canning and compressed-gas refrigeration, require much greater energy inputs. Coincident with the development of storage technologies, the transportation of food helped to overcome spatial and temporal fluctuations in productivity, culminating in today's global transport system, which delivers fresh and preserved foods worldwide. Because most contemporary humans rely on energy-intensive technologies for storing and transporting food, there are formidable challenges for feeding a growing and increasingly urbanized global population as finite supplies of fossil fuels rapidly deplete.
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