How Livestock Impacts Ecosystems

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:

Amiri, IF, Ali Ariapour and S. Fadai. 2008. Effects of Livestock Grazing on Vegetation Composition and Soil Moisture Properties in Grazed and Non-Grazed Range Site. Joumal of Biological Sciences 8 (8): 1289-1297, 2008 ISSN 1727-304

Belsky, A.J., and J. L. Gelbard, 2000. Livestock Grazing and Weed Invasions in the Arid West, Oregon Natural Desert Association, Bend, Ore, USA, 2000.

Belsky, J.A., A. Matzke, and S. Uselman, 1999.  “Survey of livestock influences on stream and riparian ecosystems in the western United States,” Journal of Soil and Water Conservation, vol. 54, no. 1, pp. 419–431, 1999

Cannon, M.R. and Dave R. Johnson. 2000. Estimated Water Use in Montana in 2000 In cooperation with the Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation Scientific Investigations USGS Report 2004-5223

Carter, J. et al., 2014. Holistic Management: Misinformation on the Science of Grazed Ecosystems.  International Journal of Biodiversity Volume 2014, Article ID 163431, 10 pages

Clegg, Kenneth. 1994. Density and Feeding Habits of Elk and Deer in Relation to Livestock Disturbance Master of Science Utah State University.

Flather, C.H. L.A. Joyce and C.A. Bloomgarden. 1994.Species Endangerment Patterns in the United States. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report RM-241. Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fort Collins, CO.

Fleischner, Thomas. 1994. Ecological Costs of Livestock Grazing on Western North America. Conservation Biology 8, no. 3629-644.

Freilich et al., 2003. Ecological Effects of Ranching: A Six-Point Critique. August 2003 / Vol. 53 No. 8 • BioScience 759

FAO, Livestock’s Long Shadow. Environmental Issues and Options (Rome, Italy: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2006).

FAO. Livestock’s Long Shadow. Livestock role in water depletion and pollution. (Rome, Italy: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2006).

Hogan J. P., Phillips C. J. C. (2011) Transmission of weed seed by livestock: a review. Animal Production Science 51, 391-398.

IPBES (2019): Global assessment report on biodiversity and ecosystem services of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. E. S. Brondizio, J. Settele, S. Díaz, and H. T. Ngo (editors). IPBES secretariat, Bonn, Germany.

Jacobs, Lynn. 1992. Waste of the West: Public Lands Ranching.

Jakesa, A., et al. 2018. A fence runs through it: A call for greater attention to the influence of fences on wildlife and ecosystems. Biological Conservation 227 (2018) 310–318

Kauffman B. and W. C. Krueger. 1984. Livestock Impacts on Riparian Ecosystems and Streamside Management Implications: A Review JOURNAL OF RANGE MANAGEMENT 37(5), September 1984

Nickerson, Cynthia and Allison Borchers. 2012. How Is Land in the United States Used? A Focus on Agricultural Land. Economic Research Service United States Department of Agriculture.

Pils, A. and J. Wilder 2018.  Risk Analysis of Disease Transmission between Domestic Sheep and Goats and Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep. USDA Forest Service, Shoshone National Forest.

Ripple, W. J., & Beschta, R. L. (2012). Large predators limit herbivore densities in northern forest ecosystems. European Journal of Wildlife Research. doi:10.1007/s10344-012-0623-5

Schieltz and Rubenstein. 2016. Evidence-based review: positive versus negative effects of livestock grazing on wildlife. What do we really know? Environmental Research Letters, 10.1088/1748-9326/11/11/113003.

Wilcove, David, et al. 1998. Quantifying Threats to Imperiled Species in the United States. Bioscience 607-613.

Wuerthner, George, and Mollie Matteson. 2002. Welfare Ranching: The Subsidized Destruction of the West. Island Press. Washington DC.

Wuerthner, George, 2002. Just Domestic Bison? Cattle are no Substitute for Buffalo. Welfare Ranching: The Subsidized Destruction of the American West. Island Press. Washington DC.

Zaady E., Eldridge D.J., Bowker M.A. (2016) Effects of Local-Scale Disturbance on Biocrusts. In: Weber B., Büdel B., Belnap J. (eds) Biological Soil Crusts: An Organizing Principle in Drylands. Ecological Studies (Analysis and Synthesis), vol 226. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-30214-0_21

12 thoughts on “How Livestock Impacts Ecosystems

  1. Yes – to all the above! I am unsure of exact quantities but the amount of water used in the production of ONE LB of beef is many gallons – for every pound of beef. That alone is scary at this particular point in time.

  2. Thank you for pulling all these peer reviewed papers together and pushing it out to us in this blog/email. This is very helpful, especially the IPBES (2019) study which I look forward to reading.

  3. It is good that Maggie mentioned water, which is a very precious necessity for life.

    One pound of beef takes around 1750 gallons of water.

    One fracking well takes between 1.5 and 16 million gallons of water. The average fracking well down in SE New Mexico and western Texas averages 15 million gallons of water. When the water is used by the fracking industry it is also contaminated. Well, there goes the neighborhood.

    It is bad enough to have cows impacting public lands but our president elect says that he will not ban fracking. How can he be so indifferent to environmental destruction?

    BLM land in particular is generally arid and dry at best. Historically, livestock use put a strain on water resources on BLM lands but fracking will likely destroy what is left. Will Biden allow the destruction of the great Oglala aquifer, just to gain support from the O & G industry?

    Doomsday is not that far off.

    1. According to what Biden has said – he wants to ban fracking on PUBLIC LAND! I heard him say that a couple times. If he follows thru on THAT it sure would be a good thing.
      Thanks Beeline for the information on quantity of gallons – I knew it was a lot but didnt remember how much. To think that much water is just gone for a lousy lb of beef! Fracking? The idea that it not only uses that much water but destroys it for everything else! Now, ideally if fracking can be prevented on public lands (and THAT wont be easy) next comes the absolute destruction that livestock grazing does. (a miracle maybe?) Just looking at the news & the droughts all over the world is really worrisome. If people dont have water – cant grow crops – more & more refugees? Talk about heads in the sand!

  4. Another thorough analysis by Dr. Wuerthner.
    I would have added the disastrous effects of 150 years of over-grazing in Utah and other W. States on Greater Sage grouse habitat. No land, public or otherwise in Utah has been set aside from over-grazing or any kind of grazing for that matter. This means that all the recent academic studies of grouse preferred habitat are not valid, in an historical context.

  5. Beeline,

    I know fracked wells have a fairly short productive lifespan. Do you know of any comparisons between the gallons of water polluted in relation to the equivalent gallons of oil/gas pumped out of a fracked well before it is abandoned? Are we trading a significant amount of clean water for an insignificant amount of fossil fuel?

  6. Beeline,

    I know fracked wells have a fairly short productive lifespan. Do you know of any comparisons between the gallons of water polluted in relation to the equivalent gallons of oil/gas pumped out of a fracked well before it is abandoned? Are we trading a significant amount of clean water for an insignificant amount of fossil fuel?

    1. Now theres a question I hadnt heard before and a very relevant one. Odd how that subject just never got mentioned & right now would be a good time considering the quantities of water being used in fracking & mining.

  7. I do not have a specific answer for Rich’s question. I have not found any economic comparison between water and produced oil. It is a logical question though.

  8. The USGS website https://www.usgs.gov/faqs/how-much-water-does-typical-hydraulically-fractured-well-require confirms Beeline’s comment that:

    “One fracking well takes between 1.5 and 16 million gallons of water.”

    According to an article in the WSJ the fracked wells that were predicted to produce 1.3 million barrels might only produce 482,000 barrels.

    https://www.desmogblog.com/2019/01/10/fracking-shale-oil-wells-drying-faster-predicted-wall-street-journal

    At 42 gallons/barrel, 482,000 barrels works out to about 20 million gallons of oil, ie, in the worst case it takes about a gallon of water to produce a gallon of oil. But it gets worse as it can take up to 50 years for a fracked well to produce a predicted amount of oil. So we are trading existing water resources for future oil that may or may not be produced. While shoving cheap water down a fracked well to drive out oil might make sense economically, it does not make sense from a environmental standpoint unless we can learn to drink oil.

    In the meantime because of the extended period to recover the oil, many of the fracking companies are going bankrupt sticking it to investors and the public by leaving behind poisoned water and landscapes. When will we ever learn? It is time to bring this nonsense to an end. Hopefully Biden will do that at least on public lands.

  9. Back to cattle and over grazing: Over grazing removes vegetation and therefore soil organic matter. Soil organic matter is necessary to form humic acids. It has more recently been found that higher levels of humic acids can digest/damage prions that are said to cause chronic wasting disease.

    It simply makes good sense to maintain a healthy soil and not allow too much organic matter to be removed. This is true for both forest and range lands etc..

    1. Read recently that CWD originally came from sheep with scraple(?) so yet another case of domestic animals transmitting disease to our wildlife! To add to that the so-called “game farms”. Then to top it off, the humans being hit with e-coli from manure etc runoff. And the list of dangers goes on & on.

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