Danthemanhere wrote: » What's the income like if you don't mind me asking?
Effects wrote: » You wouldn't believe me if I told you.
BDI wrote: » Ok beef is done with tomorrow. All the cows are shot. What is the best thing to do with them for the environment. Should we eat them until they are gone or let their carcasses return to the earth by rotting? Would a million rotten cows lead to a new virus or evolutionary change in something? Is there an end game?
Captain Flaps wrote: » We don't eat donkeys, are they endangered?
seamus wrote: » Cows are a domesticated version of a family of animals, many of whom live wild. We don't really know the full history, but what we know as a modern cow has probably been in existence as long as the domestic dog. That is, it didn't arise normally through evolution but through human-led selective breeding. As such, the decline of this species is of little concern since very little co-evolution will have taken place with it. The domestic cow as a species would likely continue to be kept by some people around the place, but as a whole you wouldn't see many of them living wild.
Effects wrote: » Most vegans keep unwanted cattle as pets, until they die of natural causes. All cows are artificially inseminated so they can't survive in the wild anyway.
BDI wrote: » Are donkeys really getting a raw deal?
gozunda wrote: » Incorrect. Cows are not 'all' artificially disseminated by any means. A real live bull is used on many farms. Lots of things cant survive in the wild (such as pets) but no one is suggesting wiping them out.
Danthemanhere wrote: » At the end of the day, it comes down to money. People will move away from traditional farming if that's where the larger profits are. Effects doesn't want to say much about it but does anyone have any information on whether plant based farming can be just as profitable for farmers?
Effects wrote: » Yeah, I'm going to take the word of a confirmed troll such as yourself :rolleyes: I'm sure you have loads of naturally inseminated, inbred cattle running around your farm. :rolleyes:
Effects wrote: » Nuts, berries, fruits.
Effects wrote: » For protection.
emaherx wrote: » Depends on the crop and the land. Irish soil is not particularly good for growing grain to produce bread for example but it dose just fine in the drinks industry. Much of the land used for cattle is no use for plant based food. So most livestock farmers would go broke if they tried to convert. Forestry might be an option but monoculture of Sika spruce would not do the environment much good.
Danthemanhere wrote: » Is there an alternative then? If cattle farming is no longer in existence and the land is useless for plant based food, what can the land be used for?
Danthemanhere wrote: » Do you think farmers will give up their land to be returned to nature?
emaherx wrote: » You mean poor land management, plenty of destruction of nature due to all kinds of human activity including producing plant based food. Can't see how me keeping a few cows causes any kind of extinction event. Farms are full of wild life much of which depends on grass land.
YFlyer wrote: » Dogs can survive in the wild.
Plumbthedepths wrote: » Pinics.
Plumbthedepths wrote: » Not all dog breeds.
Danthemanhere wrote: » Pinics: Of or pertaining to the pine; obtained from the pine; formerly, designating an acid which is the chief constituent of common resin,
Plumbthedepths wrote: » No sandwiches and lashings of ginger ale.
Eathrin wrote: » No but they'd probably sell it back to the state or take a forestry grant if they had no better use for it. Animal agriculture is a horribly inefficient use of land. Ireland is just about the least forested country in Europe now. The extinction event already happened here and it's happening elsewhere in the world right now.