Burzum wrote:
TheFerretHadToGo wrote:
Is it that they are not bred under horrible circumstances only to be slaughtered? I pity the animals who miss out on this.
Truly horrible circumstances.
I was thinking more in the line of this
Burzum wrote:
Pound for pound, more land is required to grow crops than to rear animals used for meat production.
But to feed the animals until maturity you need to grow an amount of crops larger than what would equal the food value of the meat that you get from the animals.
Burzum wrote:
To use arable land, you must first cut down trees and destroy the local ecosystem, killing the animals that live in the ecosystem.
True, but the same goes for meat production, and on a bigger scale.
LinkQuote:
Although it requires less land for the livestock, factory farming requires large quantities of feed. The growing of cereals for feed in turn requires substantial areas of land. Free-range animal production requires land for grazing, which has led to encroachment on undeveloped lands as well as clear cutting of forests. Such expansion has increased the rate of species extinction and damaged certain abilities of nature, such as the natural processing of pollutants.
[...]
Raising animals for human consumption accounts for approximately 40% of the total amount of agricultural output in industrialized countries today and livestock is the world’s largest land user. Grazing occupies 26% of the Earth’s surface, and feed crop production uses about one third of all arable land.
Because of this enormous requirement for land use, land degradation such as deforestation, desertification, and soil quality decline, which are already major global problems, are becoming more significant. Grazing land expansion for livestock is a major factor in deforestation, especially in Latin America. Approximately 70% of previously forested land in the Amazon is now used as pasture, while feed crops cover a large part of the remaining 30%. As much as 70% of grazing land is considered degraded due to overgrazing, compaction and erosion related to livestock activity. Extended heavy grazing also contributes to the disappearance of edible plant species, and the successive overgrowth of other inedible plants and bushes