Cows are Pro-Environment Contrary to Greens By James Reed

Greenies in their knee jerk ignorance, and manic focus upon cow farts, instead of their farts, miss the big ecological picture. Desertification is a much bigger problem than climate change because it is real, nobody denies it, you can see it.  But ranchers have trained cows to graze like their ancient ancestors who created grasslands in the first place, in ways that can rehabilitate deserts returning them to grass lands. Long live cows, and meat, glorious meat!

 

https://returntonow.net/2017/11/30/cows-can-turn-desert-back-grassland-save-planet/?fbclid=IwAR2ffnykkhLsVnjsX22rKGrtj_elG2TCJlOuW9SjyS6qCdEs3SPlCCReFiM

“Ranchers have transformed 40 million acres of desert back into prairie by “training” cows and other domesticated animals to graze like their wild ancestors – in tightly packed herds

Two thirds of the land on Earth is now desert or in the process of becoming desert, according to world-renowned ecologist and environmentalist Allan Savory.

If you know anything about deserts, you know that’s not good news, as neither humans nor many other species can survive very well in them.

Responsible for the collapse of many civilizations and now threatening us globally, Savory says humanity has never understood the causes of desertification. But the fact that it began around 10,000 years ago and has accelerated dramatically in the last 200 gives us a clue, he says.

Agriculture also made it’s debut on the planet around 10,000 years ago, and industrial agriculture began around 200 years ago.

The combination of desertification, an exponentially growing human population and climate change leave humanity facing a perfect storm of apocalyptic proportions,  Savory says in the famous Ted Talk below.

But not to worry, he says, cows, buffalo, sheep, goats and other grazing animals can save us… if they are allowed to graze the way they did before they were domesticated.

We’re told desertification is only happening in arid areas of the world, Savory says.

“But if you look into the soil of much of the remaining grassland, you’ll see that it’s bare and covered with a crust of algae, leading to increased runoff and evaporation.”

When we damage soils, we release carbon into the atmosphere, he says.

Livestock: the problem and the solution

Savory grew up in Africa loving wildlife and hating livestock because he was taught they were to blame for grassland destruction.

But when he moved to the United States years later, he was shocked to find national parks desertifying “as badly as anything in Africa” and there had been no livestock allowed in the parks for over 70 years

He looked into all the projects where cattle had been removed from prairie land to stop desertification, and found they had accomplished the opposite:

Climate change researchers attributed the change to “unknown processes.”

Eventually, Savory came to understand it wasn’t grazing animals themselves that were the problem, it was the way they were grazing.

Since the dawn of domestication livestock have over-grazed one area after the next, because of sedentary farmers that rarely allow them to move.

And in the last 50-years, well-intentioned environmentalists have only made the problem worse by over-correcting and removing grazing animals from “protected” lands altogether.

Over-grazing is destructive, but apparently under-grazing can be just as bad or worse, according to Savory.

 

What we have failed to understand, he says, is that grasslands were created, over millions of years, by very large herds of grazing animals.

They traveled in large herds to protect themselves from predators. The difference between large herds of wild grazers and factory-farmed cattle today, is that the former were constantly on the move.

“Large herds dung and urinate all over their own food, so they have to keep moving.”

It was the movement that created the perfect balance of grazing to keep grasslands thriving, he said.

In short, “when you take grazers off the land and lock them away in vast feedlots, the land dies,” said Prince Charles, summarizing what he’d learned from Savory’s research in his 2012 address to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

Where grazing animals have been removed, governments have resorted to burning decaying grasslands in a desperate attempt to regenerate them. Savory says the process that leaves the soil bare, releases carbon, and creates devastating air pollution.

“We are burning in Africa, every single year, more than one billion hectares of grassland,” he says. “And almost nobody is talking about it.”

Savory believes desertification is a bigger contributor to climate change than fossil fuels. And, if it continues, we will be unable to stop climate change even after we have eliminated the use of fossil fuels, he says.

“Only livestock can save us”

Because wild grazing animals have been mostly wiped off the planet, Savory says there is “only one option left” for humanity:

“To use livestock, bunched and moving, as a proxy for former herds and predators, and mimic nature.”

“There is no other alternative left to mankind,” he says.

The Savory Institute is in the process of restoring nearly 40 million acres of grassland on 5 continents, by doing just that:

The organization reversed desertification in Zimbabwe by increasing cattle and goats by 400 percent and integrating them with elephants, buffalo and giraffes.

 

 

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Friday, 29 March 2024

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