Risks in the Agricultural System

There are several risks associated with agriculture, particularly of disease and illness.

Zoonotic Diseases

The interface between humans and other animals is the major source of risk for infectious disease. The food system is a major component.

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Major causes identified for 335 emerging infectious disease outbreaks from 1940 to 2004. Source: Jones et al. 1.

Several additional studies have confirmed land use change, driven primarily by agriculture, as the most important source of risk for zoonotic disease 2, 3, 4, 5.

Foodborne Illnesses

Worldwide, foodborne illness cause about 600 million illnesses and 420 thousand deaths each year 6. In the United States, illnesses can be attributed to particular foods as follows.

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Causes, by type of food, of 4607 foodborne illness outbreaks in the United States from 1998 to 2014. There are an additional 13,596 outbreaks that cannot be attributed to a particular type of food. Caloric intake by type of food is shown for comparison. Source: illness data from Richardson et al. 7 and caloric intake data from FAOSTAT 8.

Antibiotic Resistance

Antibiotics are one of the great achievements of modern medicine, with an estimated value of $60-300 trillion in the United States alone 9. However, this value depletes with usage, since antibiotic usages causes bacteria to evolve with antibiotic resistance. Under current trends, antibiotic resistant bacteria could kill 10 million people per year and lower GDP by 2-3.5% by 2050 10. Heavy use of antibiotics in livestock is of particular concern.

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Use of antibiotics in the United States, estimated in 2013. Source: Hollis and Ahmed 9.

The connection between farm antibiotic usage and antibiotic resistance infections in humans is firmly established 11, though the marginal impact of antibiotic usage is not known with precision. It is estimated that as of 1999, the fluoroquinolone resistance of a specific pathogen, Campylobacter, was responsible for 7 cents of externalized damage per chicken produced 12, in contrast to a wholesale price of about $2 of meat per chicken. Since then, fluoroquinolone has been effectively banned in chicken production.

Antibiotic overuse in livestock can be addressed by taxation that accounts for the externalized cost of antibiotic resistant bacteria 9.

Problem:
Antibiotic Resistance
Solution:
Ban Nontherapeutic Livestock Antibiotics

Genetic Risks

With the advent of transgenic crops in particular, there is concern about ecological risks associated with the culivation of genetically modified organisms.

Horizontal gene transfer is the notion that modified genes might transition into the wild environment, causing unpredictable ecological effects. While some authors have called for GM crops to be banned on the basis of this risk, citing the precautionary principle 13, 14, there is little evidence that horizontal transfer is a significant risk 15.

GM crops have played a role in the spread of herbicide-resistant weeds, and the use of Roundup Ready corn seed may have contributed to loss of bee populations 16.

Monoculture Risk

Crop monoculture, or the planting of a single variety of crop over a large area and/or for an extended period of time, has been an important driver of high yield and low cost of production 17.

Monoculture poses a risk of crop disease, which can threaten food security. This phenomenon has been observed, for example, in the context of rice 18, forestry 19, and biofuels 20. Historically, increased vulnerability to disease resulting from monoculture production contributed to the blight behind the Irish Potato Famine 21 and the Panama Disease outbreak that devastated Gros Michel banana crops in the 1950s 22.

Problem:
Risk from Agriculture Monoculture
Solution:
Greater Variety in Planting

References

  1. Jones, K., Patel, N., Levy, M., Storeygard, A., Balk, D., Gittleman, J., Daszak, P. "Global trends in emerging infectious diseases". Nature 451, pp. 990-993. February 2008.

  2. Allen, T., Murray, K., Zambrana-Torrelio, C., Morse, S., Rondinini, C., Di Marco, M., Breit, N., Olival, K., Daszak, P. "Global hotspots and correlates of emerging zoonotic diseases". Nature Communications 8, Article number: 1124. October 2017.

  3. Gibb, R., Redding, D., Chin, K., Donnelly, C., Blackburn, T., Newbold, T., Jones, K. "Zoonotic host diversity increases in human-dominated ecosystems". Nature 282. August 2020.

  4. Horby, P., Hoa, N., Pfeiffer, D., Wertheim, H. "Drivers of Emerging Zoonotic Infectious Diseases". Confronting Emerging Zoonoses, pp. 13-26. Springer, Tokyo. 2014.

  5. National Research Council. Sustaining Global Surveillance and Response to Emerging Zoonotic Diseases. Committee on Achieving Sustainable Global Capacity for Surveillance and Response to Emerging Diseases of Zoonotic Origin; Keusch GT, Pappaioanou M, Gonzalez MC, et al., editors. Washington (DC). 2009.

  6. World Health Organization. "Food safety". April 2020.

  7. Richardson, L., Bazaco, M., Parker, C., Dewey-Mattia, D., Golden, N., Jones, K., Klontz, K., Travis, C., Kufel, J., Cole, D. "An Updated Scheme for Categorizing Foods Implicated in Foodborne Disease Outbreaks: A Tri-Agency Collaboration". Foodborne Pathogens and Disease 14(12), pp. 701-710. September 2017.

  8. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. "FAOSTAT".

  9. Hollis, A., Ahmed, Z. "Preserving Antibiotics, Rationally". New England Journal of Medicine 369, pp. 2474-2476. December 2013. 2 3

  10. O'Neill, J., chair. "Antimicrobial Resistance: Tackling a crisis for the health and wealth of nations". Review on Antimicrobial Resistance. December 2014.

  11. Hoelzer, K., Wong, N., Thomas, J., Talkington, K., Jungman, E., Coukell, A. "Antimicrobial drug use in food-producing animals and associated human health risks: what, and how strong, is the evidence?". BMC Veterinary Research 13(211). July 2017.

  12. Innes, G., Randad, P., Korinek, A., Davis, M., Price, L., So, A., Heaney, C. "External Societal Costs of Antimicrobial Resistance in Humans Attributable to Antimicrobial Use in Livestock". Annual Review of Public Health 41, pp. 141-157. April 2020.

  13. Giovannetti, M. "The ecological risks of transgenic plants". Rivista di Biologia - Biology Forum 96May 2003.

  14. Lovei, G. "Ecological risks and benefits of transgenic plants". In Proceedings of the New Zealand Plant Protection Conference 2001 (pp. 93-100). New Zealand Plant Protection Society. 1998.

  15. Keese, P. "Risks from GMOs due to Horizontal Gene Transfer". Environmental Biosafety Research 7July 2008.

  16. Hicks, D., Millstein, R. "Genetically Modified Organisms: Non-Health Issues". Encyclopedia of Food and Agricultural Ethics. 2016.

  17. Miller, G. T., Spoolman, S. Living in the Environment: Principles, Connections, and Solutions. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-0-495-55671-8. 2012.

  18. Zhu, Y., Chen, H., Fan, J., Wang, Y., Li, Y., Chen, J., Fan, J., Yang, S., Hu, L., Leung, H., Mew, T., Teng, P., Wang, Z., Mundt, C. "Genetic diversity and disease control in rice". Nature 406, pp. 718-722. August 2000.

  19. Liu, C., Kuchma, O., Krutovsky, K. "Mixed-species versus monocultures in plantation forestry: Development, benefits, ecosystem services and perspectives for the future". Global Ecology and Conservation 15, e00419. July 2018.

  20. Smith, V., McBride, R., Shurin, J., Bever, J., Crews, T., Tilman, D. "Crop diversification can contribute to disease risk control in sustainable biofuels production". Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 13(10), pp. 561-567. December 2015.

  21. Fraser, E. "Social Vulnerability and Ecological Fragility: Building Bridges between Social and Natural Sciences Using the Irish Potato Famine as a Case Study". Ecology and Society 7(2): 9. October 2003.

  22. Ploetz, R. "Panama Disease: An Old Nemesis Rears Its Ugly Head: Part 1. The Beginnings of the Banana Export Trades". Plant Health Progress 6(1): 18. 2005.