Crops can blight, animals can get diseases. I don’t know much about hydroponics but I know that bacteria are a concern. What food source is the most reliable, the least likely to produce less food than expected?

    • Seraph
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      201 year ago

      This is the right response, along with proper crop rotation. No magic single correct answer here will work.

        • Blake [he/him]
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          1 year ago

          I know you’re not really being serious, but it doesn’t really. I considered the logistics of this for an RP I was running and it doesn’t add up. You need way way way way more food to grow a human being than the human being provides in food when they’re dead. At most, being very very generous, you could meet 1% of a society’s food needs with cannibalism. And that’s a really high estimate. It’s really more of a special treat than a daily diet!

            • Blake [he/him]
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              41 year ago

              It’s so inefficient you may as well just leave the population to starve, nearly the same effect for much less work!

              • You’re going to have people anyway, and they’re going to die. We just need a process to make their deaths a d resulting disposal as productive as possible. We could set an optimum age limit; maybe gameify the process, and package it with respect and nobility. We could give it a pleasant name - something like “Carousel” maybe.

                We’re looking for balance, not a Buddhist sort of minimal impact.

        • @HouseWolf@lemm.ee
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          11 year ago

          They’re making our food out of people, next thing they’ll be breeding us like cattle! for food!

          • @PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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            -11 year ago

            But what happens when covid kills 75% of your long pig stock? Thousands will starve, millions will die!

            • gullible
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              21 year ago

              What’s funny about Soylent green is that there are a few genuinely standout scenes and insightful existential conversations, but the only line ever referenced is “Soylent green is people.” The ads were apparently more culturally relevant than the movie.

  • Hangglide
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    291 year ago

    Diversity is the most stable plan. Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. Get food from multiple sources.

  • @CreateProblems@corndog.social
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    121 year ago

    This reads like a Rimworld post.

    I don’t think there’s a Rimworld community on Lemmy and I’m not going on Reddit anymore so I’ll just throw this comment into the void and hope some fans are out there. 👋

    Also in Rimworld terms the answer is corn (if monoculture) and send everyone to harvest at the first sign of blight.

    But in both Rimworld and real life, a monoculture strategy isn’t sustainable. Diversifying via multiple food sources reduces your risk of disaster leading to starvation.

    • @TotallyHuman@lemmy.caOP
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      41 year ago

      Rimworld is awesome. But I guess I was thinking in terms of “all crops” being one type of food source. In Rimworld, you can’t get multi-year droughts that make growing anything almost impossible. In real life, you can.

    • aard
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      21 year ago

      and send everyone to harvest at the first sign of blight

      That sounds like a good strategy until blight happens in the middle of a massive invasion.

      I still do mostly corn, but with smaller fields with gaps in between. Makes it easier to take fields out of use if I don’t need them and they’d just be wasting work time, and I can ignore blight without losing too much if something else is going on.

    • @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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      11 year ago

      I was going to say hydroponic rice. It grows so quick and if anything happens it’s back up in 7 days.

      The problem with corn is that it takes so long to grow that you get a wealth spike when harvesting it and if anything happens to the harvest you can be at risk of starvation.

      • aard
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        41 year ago

        The trick is to always keep roughly a year worth of corn stored, and only sell off the excess.

        After the initial ‘getting the base running’ I usually pay merchants that accept it in corn, up to the amount where they end up giving me all their silver on top of what I wanted to buy.

  • @xeddyx@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    Aeroponics, under a controlled greenhouse environment, is technically the most stable food production method, assuming you have the ability to maintain the systems supporting it, and of course a good knowledge of a particular plant’s requirements and growth habits.

    Pros:

    1. Water Efficiency: Uses up to 98% less water compared to traditional farming.
    2. Space Efficiency: Can be used in vertical farming setups, making it ideal for urban areas.
    3. Growth Speed: Crops can grow faster due to higher oxygen levels and nutrient delivery.
    4. Reduced Pesticide Need: Since plants aren’t grown in soil, there’s a lower risk of soil-borne diseases.

    Aeroponics, when done correctly, can yield impressive results in terms of growth speed and resource efficiency compared to traditional farming.

    • @swunchy@lemm.ee
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      51 year ago

      Can vouch. I don’t have an aeroponic setup, but I do have a hydroponic setup. Lots of reading has led me to aeroponics, especially high pressure aeroponics (HPA), although I don’t have the means to set this up myself at the moment. Reduced water and land use plus higher yield and if you grow indoors or in a greenhouse you get less pests. Seems like the best possible option for growing food sustainably

  • Izzy
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    91 year ago

    I think the answer is potatoes. Other root vegetables might be equally reliable.

    • Not what I heard from an Irishman…

      But jokes in poor taste aside, yeah. I’d have to agree. A lot of grains can also do really well, but potatoes are hearty, have a lot of what you need to live, and require no attraction work to make into food after you dig them out of the ground. Onions would also be high on the list, but aren’t as viable for keeping you alive as long when eating them, nutritionally.

      • @cnnrduncan@beehaw.org
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        41 year ago

        Kinda hard to have a stable food system when an imperial power is stealing most of your food in a rather genocidal fashion!

    • @morhp@lemmy.wtf
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      1 year ago

      In spring, I put a few sprouting potatoes in the compost, waited a few month and since July or so I have a huge bucket of homegrown potatoes that I have problems to use up. So very easy food source. Can recommend. There were a few pill bugs/ potato bugs who love the taste of the plants, but their damage had not much effect on the harvest in the end.

      • The problem with the potatoes in Ireland at the time is that they were basically a monoculture and all had the same susceptibility to the same diseases.

        If you grow them as they’re traditionally grown in Central and South America, you have hundreds (or thousands!) of varieties of potatoes planted in different climate zones by utilizing mountains. You have basically no risk of a total crop failure as long as it rains or you can irrigate them.

  • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶
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    71 year ago

    Cockroaches. They can survive nuclear events and will eat almost anything. They multiply faster than plants too.

  • Yer Ma
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    61 year ago

    Intercropping, preservation of biodiversity, rotation of crops… There is no magic bean, but in the long run basic conservation combined with advancement of plant genetics is the only realistic path forward, in my professional opinion

  • One possibility is breadfruit. We, realistically, can’t depend on one though. Even the most robust staple food will still have some sort of vulnerability so it will always be of benefits to have several.

  • @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Anything living can get diseases. I’d still go for crops grown in a controlled, indoor environment.

    There’s a way to grow bacteria on natural gas if you don’t have grow lights, and they used it to make fish feed for at least a while, as well as some lab work on electricity-eating bacteria. If you don’t care about your liver I guess this drink is also technically a source of calories with no biological production needed.

  • Seize people’s grass lawns and tear out 2/3 of roadways and convert the land into community gardens and ponds, grow food where the people are. Probably some form of population control.

    Pie in the sky though. We’ll probably just start eating bugs by the container ship load and then go extinct instead

    • @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      That’s not going to be as much land as you think it is, relative to the food needs of the maybe billion people living in lawn-growing places.

      • No you’re right, but it would be one of the more difficult things to convince people to do, so in this pie in the sky scenario where people actually give a crap about anything they’d also be doing a lot of other stuff that together would make a larger whole.

          • Nah def not. Imo, from the evidence I’ve gathered so far about how the universe works, silver bullets don’t exist. Every solution has warts somewhere. Things we call “good” tend to require good old fashioned struggle and discomfort, so people need to stop pleasure seeking and chasing imaginary silver bullets. But they probably won’t, bc they’re conditioned to pleasure seek by capitalism and advertising and pop culture. Blah blah negative blah blah /rant

  • Blake [he/him]
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    31 year ago

    Crops, but not unbelievably large monocrop farms. Diverse, rotated soil in reasonably sized fields, widely distributed. A variety of different crops mitigates blights, and they’re the most efficient food source, in terms for how much food produced based on the inputs (amount of land, water, energy, etc.) and other considerations (land used, greenhouse gas emissions!

  • Elise
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    31 year ago

    Probably not the answer you’re looking for: Afaik if you store grain properly it can last over 30 years. So as long as you’re growing too much to keep your silos full and save, and you store enough, it should be incredibly reliable.

  • Uprise42
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    21 year ago

    Every form of production will have defects. The goal of perfecting production is one to be sought, but never achieved. We should always try to make food production more efficient with less loss, but there will always be loss, and always be waste.

    Even new means of production like lab grown beef can have waste and loss in batches that don’t “grow” properly because they didn’t mix hormones correctly or whatever. I actually don’t know how the science behind that works, but I do know it’s a process. And where there’s a process there’s room for error. That’s where we get loss from.

    We’ll never make something fool proof. Perhaps lab grown meats will be the most efficient form of product in that they have the lowest loss and production can be tweaked fairly quickly so there’s not a lot of loss and ramped up for shipments to areas with food shortages. Honestly, lab grown in my opinion has the best chances of being a major breakthrough but it’s still too early to be sure.

    • Blake [he/him]
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      01 year ago

      There’s no way that lab grown meat would be more efficient than just growing vegetables,

        • Blake [he/him]
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          01 year ago

          The “extra” plant matter should be composted, and used to replenish the nutrients back into the soil, and more importantly. The resources used to grow that plant is then restored to the source and more importantly feeds the ecosystem better. Remember the inputs into growing in soil are mostly from the sun, rain and carbon dioxide. They are a completely natural source of solar power and carbon capture.