Getting at the true costs of livestock production is nearly impossible. The real ecological costs are uncountable, and even the public taxpayer costs are obscured.
Cattle grazing Grand Staircase Escalante NM, Utah. Photo by George
Wuerthner.
Livestock production is one of the most ubiquitous human activities around
the globe. It is particularly detrimental to arid lands, and much of the
western public lands are arid. Typically most livestock advocates, which
also includes far too many conservation organizations, focus on one or two
areas where livestock impacts can be mitigated (not eliminated) such as
fencing riparian areas to protect water quality or range riders to fend off
predators.
But all of these are just halfway measures that ignore a full accounting of
the multiple ways that livestock production harms our ecosystems, wildlife,
and our planet. They do not address the real issue-does it make sense to use
water-loving, slow-moving, domesticated animals to produce protein? There
are alternative sources of protein, and certainly better places to do this
than the arid lands of the Western U.S.
There have been some excellent reviews of livestock impacts.
Welfare Ranching: The Subsidized Destruction of the American West (Wuerthner
and Matteson 2002) has numerous chapters addressing many aspects of
livestock production ecological impacts in the arid West.
Waste of the West: Public Lands Ranching by Lynn Jacobs. A classic book that
is heavily illustrated. An excellent primer for anyone who is interested in
getting acquainted with the issue.
A classic paper is Thomas Fleischner’s Ecological Costs of Livestock Grazing
in North America (Fleischner 1994).
Another is Freilich et al. Ecological Effects of Ranching: A Six-Point
Critique.
A critical review of Allan Savory Claims by John Carter et al. (2014) is
useful.
More recently, a review of global impacts is Livestock’s Long Shadow, which
asserts that livestock production is the leading cause of biodiversity loss
(FAO 2006).
In 2019 the U.N. updated the earlier report with the IPBES (2019): Global
assessment report on biodiversity and ecosystem services of the
Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem
Services. The review finds that Agriculture, particularly livestock grazing,
is the single greatest impact on global biodiversity and contributes
significant amounts of CO2 to GHG emissions.
Quoting from the report, “Over one-third of the world’s land surface and
nearly three-quarters of available freshwater resources are devoted to crop
or livestock production {2.1.11}. Crop production occurs on some 12 percent
of total ice-free land. Grazing occurs on about 25 percent of total ice-free
lands and approximately 70 percent of drylands {2.1.11}. Approximately 25
percent of the globe’s greenhouse gas emissions come from land clearing,
crop production, and fertilization, with animal-based food contributing 75
percent of that.”
The key findings of the report include:
Livestock production (grazing and feedstock) is the single largest driver of
global habitat loss.
Grazing areas for cattle account for about 25% of the world’s ice-free land.
Animal agriculture contributes at least 18% to global greenhouse gas
emissions.
Livestock production uses a large portion of freshwater resources.
One-third of the world’s crops are used as feed for livestock production.
Animal-based foods, especially beef, require more water and energy than
plant-based foods. This production of crops for animal feed means more
greenhouse-gas emissions.
The meat and dairy industries use 83% of farmland but contribute only 18% of
food calories.
Farmed animals now account for over 90% of all large land animals.
Producing protein via farmed animals is a very wasteful use of resources. It
can take from 10kg to 100kg of plant foods to produce just 1kg of animal
products.
The demand for grain-fed meat is one of the main drivers of global
biodiversity loss.
Within the United States, livestock production is a significant land use
(see excel chart) NPLGC has been identified as contributing to these
ecological losses and habitat degradation.
Cattle grazing Sonoran Desert National Monument, Arizona. Photo by
George Wuerthner.
Key Impacts of Livestock Production (Not Just Grazing) Upon the Land
1. Forage competition—the majority of the forage is consumed by livestock,
leaving little residual cover or food for native wildlife (Schieltz and
Rubenstein. 2016).
2. Livestock compact and trample soils reducing infiltration, creating
higher run-off, more flooding and erosion (Kauffman B. and W. C. Krueger.
1984 , Belsky, J.A et al. 1999).
3. Livestock is the major source of non-point water pollution in the West
(FAO 2006).
4. Livestock destroys soil biocrusts that bind soils and captures free
nitrogen making it available to plant growth, soil crusts and inhibit weed
establishment (Zaady E., Eldridge D.J., Bowker M.A. (2016).
5. Livestock is among the chief sources of weed dispersal. Also, the
trampling of plants, as well as cropping of desirable plants give weedy
species a competitive advantage (Hogan J. P., Phillips C. J. C. (2011).
6. Most of the West’s water is diverted for livestock forage production
(i.e. hay). In Montana, 97% of all water removed from streams is used by
agriculture (M.R. Cannon and Dave R. Johnson 2000).
7. Livestock can socially displace native species. Elk and other species
have been shown to avoid areas actively being grazed by domestic animals
(Clegg, Kenneth. 1994).
8. Livestock transmits disease to native, i.e. as in bighorn sheep (Pils and
Wilder 2018).
9. Predator and pest control such as the killing of wolves and prairie dogs
greatly reduces the ecological integrity of the landscape (Ripple and
Beschta 2012).
10. Trampling of riparian areas negatively affects 75-80% of the West’s
wildlife species (Kauffman B. and W. C. Krueger 1984).
11. Plant community conversion—grazing can lead to the eventual
transformation of a plant community (F. Amiri, Ali Ariapour and S. Fadai.
12. Livestock grazing contributes to increased fire severity by removing
grasses allowing tree seedlings to become established, leading to greater
tree densities. Livestock has led to the spread of cheat grass—a highly
flammable annual grass that increased fire frequency, negatively impacting
native grasses and shrubs (Belsky, A.J., and J. L. Gelbard, 2000).
13. Livestock interrupts nutrients cycles (Fleischner 1994)
14. Livestock degrades the aesthetics of the landscape.
15. Forage production and livestock grazing off and on public lands affect
native plant communities. There are 1.9 billion acres in the United States
outside of Alaska. Agriculture, particularly, livestock production affects
more than half of that acreage. There are 408 million acres of agricultural
land were in cropland—much of it forage crops to feed to livestock–614
million acres were in pasture and range, 127 million acres were in grazed
forestland (Cynthia Nickerson and Allison Borchers 2012).
16. Livestock affects many smaller native species that are seldom on the
radar screen of most citizens from snails to frogs (Wuerthner and Matteson
2002).
17. Livestock production is responsible for more endangered species than
other land use in the West (Flather et al. 1994).
18. Fences, water development, and other developments used to maintain
livestock operations have negative impacts on native species. Fences can
block wildlife migration or fence posts may provide perches for birds of
prey to attack sage grouse (Jakesa et al. 2018).
19. Getting at the true costs of livestock production is nearly impossible.
The real ecological costs are uncountable, and even the public taxpayer
costs are obscured (Wuerthner and Matteson 2002).
References
Number of animals killed in the world by the fishing, meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage.
0 marine animals
0 chickens
0 ducks
0 pigs
0 rabbits
0 turkeys
0 geese
0 sheep
0 goats
0 cows / calves
0 rodents
0 pigeons/other birds
0 buffaloes
0 dogs
0 cats
0 horses
0 donkeys and mules
0 camels / camelids