2. What is monoculture? What is the danger linked to this practice
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Answer:
Modern monoculture requires vast amounts of rain for irrigating crops as moisture retention is limited in the soil. A lack of topsoil also increases rain runoff. ... The worlds long term food production comes at risk from high use of fertilizers, pests, loss of biodiversity, soil fertility and environmental pollution.
Monocropping has many disadvantages to the environment.
Due to the weakness of the soil, it is then unable to support healthy plant growth. This causes a chain reaction of the soil structure and quality being so poor that farmers are forced to use chemical fertilizers to encourage plant growth and fruit production.
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UR ANSWER
Modern monoculture requires vast amounts of rain for irrigating crops as moisture retention is limited in the soil. A lack of topsoil also increases rain runoff. ... The worlds long term food production comes at risk from high use of fertilizers, pests, loss of biodiversity, soil fertility and environmental pollution