Perspective

|

Health

There’s Nothing Natural About Modern Meat

By Jessica Scott-Reid

August 29, 2023 – 3 min read

image of chicken sitting on dirt floor, modern meat production

Haig / World Animal Protection / We Animals Media

The culture war pitting plant-based meat against its animal-based counterpart rages on, it seems. Plant-based alternatives are called “ultra-processed,” “fake” and “synthetic” — juxtaposed against factory farmed animal meat that’s touted as “all natural” and “single ingredient.” How did we get here?

One recent source of this conflict — and the subsequent backlash to plant-based meat — can be traced back to meat industry manipulation. A Super Bowl commercial and a New York Times ad, paid for by a public relations firm used by the meat industry, planted seeds of doubt about “scary” ingredients in plant-based meat back in 2020. 

Sales of Beyond and Impossible burgers went on to plateau — for a number of reasons that food industry media continues to hash out. But even as the debate over “unnatural” and high-tech plant-based products persists, the assumed naturalness of animal products appears to be flying under the radar. It shouldn’t.

70 Percent of the World’s Meat Comes From Factory Farms

Those oft-invoked images of small family farms, rolling bucolic pastures and friendly neighborhood abattoirs are far from reality across most of today’s food system. More than 70 percent of the world’s meat comes from factory farms. The setting usually features massive windowless sheds and packed dusty lots run more by technology than humans — mechanized, production line-style slaughterhouses that use gas chambers and electricity to kill more animals per day than ever before. In other words, in most of the world, animal agriculture is anything but natural.

Take action and make a difference

Of course, the entire point of modern farming is to harness natural resources to grow enough to feed humans, which is not a bad thing — but it’s far from a wild, all-natural ecosystem. Perhaps more productive than measuring which foods are “natural,” would be to measure how to best feed people humanely and justly while leaving actual nature alone as much as possible. 

Consider just how many farm animals populate the globe today. The number of livestock farms across the western world has been in steady decline over the last fifty years. The number of animals, though, has drastically increased. The industry calls this efficiency, but many animal and environmental researchers see it as great cause for concern. 

Sometimes called confined animal feeding operations (CAFOS), or industrialized or intensive farming, the predominant method of producing meat and dairy today involves packing large numbers of animals into confined spaces or onto barren lots — a far cry from their natural habitats. In these confined spaces, animals may be manipulated with light, deprived at times and over-stimulated at others and impeded from exhibiting many natural behaviors, even the simple act of turning around.

Animals farmed for food today are bred and genetically manipulated to possess more profitable traits, like accelerated growth and larger size, for instance. This results in farmed animals bearing very little resemblance to their wild ancestors, and who suffer from various ailments due to their unnatural physiology.

images of farmed chickens in increasing sizes starting in 1957, 1978 and 2005 modern meat production
Zuidhof, MJ, et al. 2014 Poultry Science 93 :1–13

Most Soy and Corn Feed Animals, Not Plant-Based Nuggets

And despite increased promotion of grass-fed beef and regenerative grazing over the last few years, the vast majority of animals farmed for food in the global north are not out to pasture chowing on fresh foliage. About a third of all corn grown in the U.S. (the nation’s top crop), is used for animal feed while about 60 percent of all soybean meal produced in the US also goes to feeding farmed animals. On a global scale nearly 80 percent of the world’s soybeans go to animals farmed for food. 

What’s more, there is often confusion about what grass-fed even means — it can actually include cattle who were fed grass (including farmed and harvested grasses) for only a portion of their lives. The bottom line —  the arguments that a plant-based diet promotes mono-crops, GMOs and even mass death of small animals killed in crop harvesting is moot when you consider that most of the soy and corn grown today goes to farmed animal feed.

Horse Blood, Antibiotics and Hormones 

There is also nothing natural about the way animals are raised on industrial meat operations. In order to produce enough meat to satisfy a population of meat-eaters, pig farms, for example, often feed sows a hormone sourced from the blood of pregnant horses — entire horse blood farms exist just to extract blood from mares, in fact.

Chickens, pigs and cows are often fed antibiotics, hormones and even the same vitamin supplementation that plant-based eaters are chastised for: B12. These practices are designed to minimize the spread of disease in what are unsanitary and unnatural conditions — and as a consequence we are experiencing skyrocketing rates of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) among humans. The World Health Organization declared this one of the top 10 global public health threats to humanity in 2019, and the United Nations estimates it could kill as many as 10 million people annually by 2050. 

“All-Natural” Meat Has Deep Roots

If all this comes as a surprise, you’re not alone. Our collective perception of meat as natural is deeply rooted in our psyche, according to Melanie Joy, PhD, social psychologist and author of Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows: An Introduction to Carnism. The meat industry has long relied on the narrative that meat is normal, natural and necessary, she argues. Now, boosters for animal agriculture are doubling down on those efforts.  

Ultimately, there is nothing natural about modern meat, dairy and eggs. Their environmental toll on nature is indisputable — wild ecosystems that are essential for keeping climate pollution and pandemics in check are being destroyed by industrial meat. It’s modern meat that’s the threat to nature, not plant-based burgers. Yet somehow, that’s not what we’re talking about.  

Read More

The Backlash to Plant-Based Meat Has a Sneaky, if Not Surprising, Explanation

The Blood of Pregnant Mares Fuels Factory Farming – Literally

America’s Farmed Shrimp Habit Is Fueling Antibiotic Resistance

Point Reyes National Seashore formalizes proposal for removal of elk fence

https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/point-reyes-national-seashore-formalizes-proposal-for-removal-of-elk-fence/

MARY CALLAHAN

THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

August 28, 2023, 10:39AM

Updated 6 hours ago

How to comment on proposed management of Tomales Point

The public comment period is open until 10:59 p.m. Monday, Sept. 25.

To provide input online, the preferred method, send comments through

the National Park Service Planning, Environment and Public Comment at parkplanning.nps.gov/tpap.

Hard copy comments may also be submitted by mail or

hand delivery to: Tomales Point Area Plan, c/o Superintendent, Point Reyes National Seashore, 1 Bear Valley Road, Point Reyes Station, CA 94956.

Comments submitted any other way will not be permitted.

A virtual public meeting on the three proposed alternatives will be held from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sept. 7.

Register at bit.ly/3P5PtDl

The Point Reyes National Seashore has formalized its proposal to remove the 2-mile fence enclosing tule elk at Tomales Point as part of a larger plan for the 2,900-acre promontory that would shift the balance away from long-held ranching interests in favor of native herds.

The multifaceted proposal is among three drastically differing alternatives offered up for public review over the next month as the National Park Service updates its overall management plan for Tomales Point — a rugged, wind-swept landscape adjoining historic range lands for dairy and beef cattle.

At the other extreme, there remains potential for use of lethal force to control elk populations — a hot-button topic that has caused substantial criticism of the National Park Service and the Point Reyes National Seashore in recent years.

RELATED STORIES

Two young tule elk bulls practice their jousting at Point Reyes National Seashore. (John Burgess / The Press Democrat file)

Point Reyes National Seashore to propose removal of Tomales Point elk fence

“It’s very clearly sort of one future or another, so to speak,” said Chance Cutrano, program director with the Fairfax-based Resource Renewal Institute, adding that he suspected pressure from activists was influencing the park’s direction.

Cutrano’s organization is one of three conservation groups that sued the Seashore over provisions in a recent General Management Plan Amendment that include culling a separate elk herd in the park to cap the population. The Institute and the other plaintiffs are currently engaged in confidential mediation with the Seashore, along with numerous ranchers from the area who intervened on the park’s behalf.

There also is a pending suit in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal directly involving activists’ demands that the Tomales Point fence come down — part of an outcry that escalated during the last, extended drought, which is believed to have contributed to die-offs in the enclosed herd that reduced its size from 445 in 2019 to 220 in 2021.

View the profile of "Compassionate Action"

“That is 100% attributable to the fact they were fenced in,” said Jeff Miller, a conservation advocate with the Center for Biological Diversity, which was among the groups that sued the Seashore. Even with drought, two other, free-roaming herds “were actually expanding.”

https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/core/bridge3.586.0_en.html#goog_2039398791

“That’s just a bad look for a national park to be keeping native wildlife in a zoo-like condition,” he said.

The Tomales Point herd this year numbered 262. It is one of three tule elk populations in the park. Two of them — in the Drakes Beach and Limantour wilderness areas — are free-roaming and managed separately from the Tomales Point herd, which is currently under the purview of a 1998 operational plan that would be replaced by the new one.

All of the Seashore’s tule elk — once the region’s dominant grazer — are descendant from 10 individual animals relocated to the park in 1978 from a small isolated herd that was preserved after hunting and ranching diminished the state population to very few. Tule elk only exist in California.

When reintroduced, the elk were kept behind a tall fence meant to sequester them from cattle. Twenty years later, in 1998, the herd had surpassed 300 individuals, and some were moved to the area near Limantour Beach to relieve population pressure.

Established by Congress in 1962, the 71,000-acre Seashore has long wrestled with competing demands from ranchers rooted on the landscape for generations and environmentalists who believe the commitment made to agriculture conflicts with the park’s mission to protect natural resources.

There has been friction over competition for land and forage, as well as concern prompted by Johne’s disease, a usually fatal, bacterial infection related to tuberculosis that can be transmitted among cattle, elk, deer and other cud-chewing, hoofed animals.

The new proposal is the result of more than a year of public engagement over how to improve management of the Tomales Point herd.

The public may comment on the three alternatives until Sept. 25.

The first option is to maintain current operations on Tomales Point, confining the herd and providing supplemental water when natural water sources are limited, as occurred during the drought.

Management of invasive plants would be limited, and Pierce Ranch, a historic, mid-19th and early 20th-century dairy farm listed on the Natural Register of Historic Places, would exist as a passive exhibit with self-guided tours.

The Seashore’s proposed alternative would bring considerable change, including removal of the high fence that runs across it, as well as removal of 12 other barriers designed to keep elk out of vegetation monitoring areas.

The park also would consider adding a fence to keep cattle off the point.

This approach would feature greater coordination with the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria, which entered into a partnership with the U.S. Department of the Interior two years ago, incorporating traditional ecological and ethnobotanical knowledge. The potential use of prescribed fire to promote native plant species would be included.

The latest proposal also calls for development of Pierce Ranch as a “core location for visitor use,” improving access, increasing capacity for parking and extending trails while improving them to better protect natural resources. It also would refine the park camping program and beach access to protect natural and cultural resources.

https://2cc2d6e16d6452af24bd4cd0c8803c10.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

A third alternative would not only retain the fence but allow for lethal removal of elk to control population size. It would also call for removal of supplementary water systems.

The National Seashore is hosting a virtual public meeting Sept. 7 so the public can learn more about the alternatives in advance of the Sept. 25 comment deadline.

Park spokeswoman Melanie Gunn said the next step would be for the Seashore to develop an environmental assessment of the options, which would be subject to public comment likely next summer, with a final decision expected in late 2024.

Under federal law, the park is required to offer a “no change” alternative, as well as a range of options, even if it’s only three.

But the proposed option, which includes the fence removal, “is at this point the proposed action the National Park Service believes will best address the purpose and need,” Gunn said.

But Miller, with the Center for Biological Diversity, was cautious.

“This is a proposal right now,” he said. “The park service has not agreed to this or implemented it. They’ve implemented planning processes before and abandoned them.“

Retired fishing vessels will serve as artificial reefs

Default Mono Sans Mono Serif Sans Serif Comic Fancy Small CapsDefault X-Small Small Medium Large X-Large XX-LargeDefault Outline Dark Outline Light Outline Dark Bold Outline Light Bold Shadow Dark Shadow Light Shadow Dark Bold Shadow Light BoldDefault Black Silver Gray White Maroon Red Purple Fuchsia Green Lime Olive Yellow Navy Blue Teal Aqua OrangeDefault 100% 75% 50% 25% 0%Default Black Silver Gray White Maroon Red Purple Fuchsia Green Lime Olive Yellow Navy Blue Teal Aqua OrangeDefault 100% 75% 50% 25% 0%

As working fishing vessels, the Mermentau and the G.P. Chauvin spent years pulling in menhaden from Gulf waters. Now in retirement, these boats have a new purpo

By Leslie Rojas

https://www.wlox.com/2023/08/28/retired-fishing-vessels-will-serve-artificial-reefs/

Published: Aug. 27, 2023 at 8:25 PM PDT|Updated: 20 hours ago

BILOXI, Miss. (WLOX) -This week, Omega Protein sank two retired menhaden fishing vessels to create artificial reefs in Mississippi waters.

As working fishing vessels, the Mermentau and the G.P. Chauvin spent years pulling in menhaden from Gulf waters. Now in retirement, these boats have a new purpose as artificial reefs.

“We have a mud bottom of the coast of Mississippi. That does nothing for Fin Fish. It’s great for fish, but it doesn’t do anything for Fin Fish. So, when you put some type of structure, no matter what it is, it starts a whole new ecosystem in and around that structure,” Ralph Humphrey said.

Omega Protein partnered with the Mississippi Gulf Fishing Banks and the Department of Marine Resources to drop the vessels.

https://6f31cf2bc46531346cda27cd88a029a3.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

As President of the non-profit Mississippi Gulf Fishing Banks, Ralph Humphrey has witnessed these artificial reefs develop.

“Within four months of the deployment, you can see red snapper on the structure. You’ll see fish. You’ll see bait fish gathered on the top of it. It doesn’t take long at all,” Humphrey said.

The exact location of the deployment is kept secret for 12 months. That’s the amount of time DMR scientists believe it takes for an ecosystem to develop.

“Reef surface is a great enhancement for that. It allows fish to live in. A normal reef is difficult to find in the Gulf of Mexico, so when you can create an artificial reef where you can tack on is a wonderful opportunity,” Ben Landry said.

Omega Protein President Ben Landry says his company continues to donate these vessels to help the environment.

Once that one-year incubation period has passed, people can find these locations by searching for artificial reefs on the Mississippi DMR website.

Click here to subscribe to WLOX News on YouTube: Keep up with South Mississippi news, sports, and local events on our YouTube channel!