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Human population and food availability

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Central Australian landscape. Australia is mostly unpopulated as a result of having amongst the least fertile soils in the world.[1][2]

Individuals from a wide range of academic fields and political backgrounds have proposed that, like all other animal populations, any human population (and, by extension, the world population) predictably grows and shrinks according to available food supply, growing during an abundance of food and shrinking in times of scarcity.[3] This idea may run counter to the popular thinking that, as population grows, food supply must also be increased to support the growing population; instead, the claim here is that growing population is the result of a growing food supply. Notable proponents of this notion include: agronomist and insect ecologist David Pimentel,[4] behavioral scientist Russell Hopfenberg (the former two publishing a study on the topic in 2001),[5] anthropologist and activist Virginia Abernethy,[6] ecologist Garrett Hardin,[7] science writer and anthropologist Peter Farb, journalist Richard Manning,[8] environmental biologist Alan D. Thornhill,[9] cultural critic and writer Daniel Quinn,[10] and anarcho-primitivist John Zerzan.[11]

Scientists generally acknowledge that at least one significant factor contributing to population growth (or overpopulation) is that as agriculture advances in creating more food, the population consequently increases—the Neolithic Revolution and Green Revolution often specifically provided as examples of such agricultural breakthroughs.[12][13][14][15][16][17] Furthermore, certain scientific studies do lend evidence to food availability in particular being the dominant factor within a more recent timeframe.[18][19][4] Other studies take it as a basic model from which to make broad population conjectures.[12] The idea became taboo following the United Nations' 1994 International Conference on Population and Development, where framing human population growth as negatively impacting the natural environment became regarded as "anti-human".[20]

Most human populations throughout history validate this theory, as does the overall current global population. Populations of hunter-gatherers fluctuate in accordance with the amount of available food. The world human population began consistently and sharply to rise, and continues to do so, after sedentary agricultural lifestyles became common due to the Neolithic Revolution and its increased food supply.[21][14][17] This was, subsequent to the Green Revolution starting in the 1940s, followed by even more severely accelerated population growth. Often, wealthier countries send their surplus food resources to the aid of starving communities; however, some proponents of this theory argue that this seemingly beneficial strategy only results in further harm to those communities in the long run. Anthropologist Peter Farb, for example, has commented on the paradox that "intensification of production to feed an increased population leads to a still greater increase in population."[22] Environmental writer Daniel Quinn has also focused on this phenomenon, which he calls the "food race", coining a term he felt was comparable, in terms of both escalation and potential catastrophe, to the nuclear arms race.

Criticism of this theory can come from multiple angles, for example by demonstrating that human population is not solely an effect of food availability, but that the situation is more complex. For instance, other relevant factors that can increase or limit human population include fresh water availability, arable land availability, energy consumed per person, heat removal, forest products, and various nonrenewable resources like fertilizers.[23] Another criticism is that, in the modern era, birth rates are lowest in the developed nations, which also have the highest access to food. In fact, some developed countries have both a diminishing population and an abundant food supply. The United Nations projects that the population of 51 countries or areas, including Germany, Italy, Japan, and most of the states of the former Soviet Union, is expected to be lower in 2050 than in 2005.[24] This shows that, limited to the scope of the population living within a single given political boundary, particular human populations do not always grow to match the available food supply. However, the global population as a whole still grows in accordance with the total food supply and many of these wealthier countries are major exporters of food to poorer populations, so that, according to Hopfenberg and Pimentel's 2001 research, "it is through exports from food-rich to food-poor areas... that the population growth in these food-poor areas is further fueled.[4] Their study thus suggests that human population growth is an exacerbating feedback loop in which food availability creates a growing population, which then causes the misimpression that food production must be consequently expanded even further.[25]

Regardless of criticisms against the theory that population is a function of food availability, the human population is, on the global scale, undeniably increasing,[26] as is the net quantity of human food produced—a pattern that has been true for roughly 10,000 years, since the human development of agriculture. The fact that some affluent countries demonstrate negative population growth fails to discredit the theory as a whole, since the world has become a globalized system with food moving across national borders from areas of abundance to areas of scarcity. Hopfenberg and Pimentel's 2001 findings support both this[4] and Daniel Quinn's direct accusation, in the early 2010s, that "First World farmers are fueling the Third World population explosion".[27]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Kelly, Karina (13 September 1995). "A Chat with Tim Flannery on Population Control". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 13 January 2010. Retrieved 23 April 2010. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help) "Well, Australia has by far the world's least fertile soils".
  2. Grant, Cameron (August 2007). "Damaged Dirt" (PDF). The Advertiser. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2010. Australia has the oldest, most highly weathered soils on the planet.
  3. Bystroff, Chistopher (2021). "Footprints to singularity: A global population model explains late 20th century slow-down and predicts peak within ten years". PLoS ONE 16(5): e0247214. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247214
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Hopfenberg, Russell and Pimentel, David, "Human Population Numbers as a Function of Food Supply", Environment, Development and Sustainability, vol. 3, no. 1, March 2001, pp. 1–15
  5. "Human Carrying Capacity is Determined by Food Availability" (PDF). Russel Hopfenberg, Duke University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-09-21. Retrieved 2023-01-10. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  6. Abernathy, Virginia, Population Politics ISBN 0-7658-0603-7 Search this book on .
  7. Hardin, Garrett (1974). "Lifeboat Ethics: the Case Against Helping the Poor". Psychology Today. 8: 38–43.
  8. Manning, Richard (7 September 2011). "Richard Manning on the Green Revolution and the End of Cheap Oil" (Interview). Interviewed by Sally Erickson and Timothy Scott Bennett. Retrieved 15 October 2013 – via YouTube.
  9. Food Production & Population Growth, video with Daniel Quinn and Alan Thornhill
  10. Quinn, Daniel, Ishmael Bantam/Turner, 1995, ISBN 0613080939 Search this book on .
  11. Zerzan, John (2 April 2008). On Modernity and the Technosphere (Speech). Binghamton University.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Gilland, Bernard (2006). "Population, nutrition and agriculture". Population and Environment, 28(1), 1.
  13. Bocquet-Appel, Jean-Pierre (2011). "When the world’s population took off: the springboard of the Neolithic Demographic Transition". Science, 333(6042), 560-561.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Li, Xiaoqiang et al. (2009). "Increases of population and expansion of rice agriculture in Asia, and anthropogenic methane emissions since 5000 BP". Quaternary International, 202(1-2), 41-50.
  15. Kopnina, Helen, & Washington, Haydn (2016). "Discussing why population growth is still ignored or denied". Chinese Journal of Population Resources and Environment, 14(2), 133-143.
  16. "What Causes Overpopulation?" Euroscientist. Euroscience: "When agriculture advances, and it becomes easier to feed the population, it continues to grow."
  17. 17.0 17.1 "The Development of Agriculture". National Geographic. 2022.
  18. Cohen, Joel E. (1995). Population growth and earth's human carrying capacity. Science, 269(5222), 341-346.
  19. Fanta, V., Šálek, M., Zouhar, J., Sklenicka, P., & Storch, D. (2018). Equilibrium dynamics of European pre-industrial populations: the evidence of carrying capacity in human agricultural societies. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 285(1871), 20172500.
  20. Henderson, Kirsten, & Loreau, Michel (2019). "An ecological theory of changing human population dynamics". People and Nature, 1(1), 32.
  21. GJ Armelagos, AH Goodman, KH Jacobs Population and environment - 1991 link.springer.com
  22. Farb, Peter: 1978, Humankind. Boston, Houghton Mifflin.
  23. Van Den Bergh, Jeroen, & Rietveld, Piet (2004). "Reconsidering the limits to world population: meta-analysis and meta-prediction". BioScience, 54(3), 195-204.
  24. Rosa, Daniele (2019). "Nel 2050 gli italiani saranno 20 milioni meno secondo l'Onu [Translation: In 2050 the Italians will be 20 million less, according to the UN]". Affaritaliani. Uomini & Affari Srl.
  25. Salmony, Steven E. (2006). "The Human Population: Accepting Species Limits". Environmental Health Perspectives, 114(1), A 17. https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.114-a17.
  26. Daniel Quinn (1996). The Story of B, pp. 304–305, Random House Publishing Group, ISBN 0553379011 Search this book on ..
  27. Quinn, Daniel: "The Question (ID Number 122)". Retrieved October 2014 from "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 18 October 2014. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link).



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