Livestock Essays

  • Livestock Should Be Raised

    676 Words  | 2 Pages

    How is our livestock is raised? They are not really raised like they should. They are fed a lot of medications that could harm them and have bad, unbearable living conditions. For a long time livestock has been raised in confinement, no sun, no space to move, and live in horrible conditions where they are fed food with a lot of antibiotics in it. There should be regulations on the amount of medications animals can be fed, they should also have a chance to go outside at least three times a day. Feeding

  • Animal Livestock Workers

    834 Words  | 2 Pages

    However, one issue of why livestock workers are unable to perform healthy and effectively is due to the system management. The basic trainings for animal livestock workers does not teach and focus on the care for animals but security for the workers themselves. It teaches self safety and avoidance of injury when animal lives are also at risk if they are not treated properly. “Workers in many of these occupations receive on-the-job training to help them avoid injury, a risk that increases for those

  • Livestock Workers Cons

    518 Words  | 2 Pages

    Additionally, livestock workers lack quality performance and should be adequately trained to better understand the pros and cons of working with farm animals. One way of improving this issue is by providing successful training techniques of teaching others to have knowledge of animal early on. “If the caretaker knows his or her animals normal behavior, then the early stages of a health problem will be recognized and can be treated earlier” (Dr. Lyle G. McNeal). This example shows that the worker

  • The Effects Of Livestock On Global Warming

    1311 Words  | 3 Pages

    Effects of livestock on Global Warming Forests are ripped up, summers and winters are warmer, ice caps melt making sea levels rise, and many animals have gone further north to live. All of these occurrences attribute to global warming. There are plenty of factors causing global warming, livestock being one of them. People don’t usually consider that livestock could be an element of global warming. To sustain livestock, you need land, water and food, with food comes excretion; by reducing the amount

  • Navajo Livestock Reduction Essay

    548 Words  | 2 Pages

    Livestock inflicted onto the Navajo people back in the early 1930’s was a result of the reorganization of the Dine people’s government. I understand the means of a livestock reduction because I am looking at it from a geological point of view. The earth’s soil needs to be packed whereas when you have tons of animal grazing you are ruining all the nutrients to sustain the soil. However, to not be arrogant and selfish I need to look at the livestock reduction from all points of view. I need to look

  • Persuasive Essay On Livestock Showing

    516 Words  | 2 Pages

    Livestock is vitally important for food and other activities. In high-school, livestock showing is very popular. Livestock showing teaches many things, including responsibility. Showing is far more than just taking an animal into the show ring, you must prepare. When show season is complete the animals go somewhere, even though people don’t want to think about it. While showing there is a lot of responsibility. Whether it’s showing beef cows, dairy cows, pigs, or even goats certain things must be

  • The Pros And Cons Of Livestock Farming

    1100 Words  | 3 Pages

    The livestock farmer is starting to realize that it is in their bottom line best interest to treat their animals humanely. Livestock farming “is breeding animals solely to maximize production of meat, milk and eggs” (Weeks). Historically, the livestock farmer (including egg producers); in the United States and around the world, has treated the animals that they are raising and slaughtering horribly. Over the last thirty years thanks to animal welfare activists, the abysmal treatment of these

  • Livestock Farming Case Study

    2129 Words  | 5 Pages

    1.1 INTRODUCTION Livestock can be described as all domesticated animals, especially sheep, goats, cattle and pigs, intentionally reared in an agricultural setting for food, fibre or breeding purposes (Ntshepe, 2011). Livestock systems occupy about 30 percent of the planet’s dry land surface area (Steinfeld et al., 2006a). According to Nouman et al. (2014), livestock has the biggest land-use activity globally, which is expected to double by 2020 with an annual increase of 2.7 percent in meat production

  • Methane Emissions: Livestock Versus Natural Gas

    790 Words  | 2 Pages

    Methane and Livestock: What’s The Problem? Take a moment and think about what you had for dinner last night; likely you consumed some type of meat - which when that animal was alive was probably a methane producer. CH4, or methane gas is the second most abundant greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. Methane comes from sources such as livestock, landfills, producing and transporting natural gas, and mining coal. Livestock only produces a fraction of the amount of methane produced every year. Drilling

  • Superbugs and Large-scale Use of Antibiotics in Livestock Feeding

    3100 Words  | 7 Pages

    morality. One example, the large-scale use of antibiotics in livestock feeding, has become a staple of the American agriculture industry. Of all the agricultural advancements the industry has made since the days of the horse and plow, none has been as threatening to human health as the use of sub therapeutic levels of antibiotics (Schneider). Antibiotics are useful for sick animals, just as they are useful for sick humans. In the livestock industry, their indiscriminate use on healthy animals, while

  • Livestock: Horses Should not be Slaughtered in the United States

    619 Words  | 2 Pages

    been sold is to be sent to slaughter. These horses have bloodlines of nearly pure Spanish stock and are an essential part of America’s living history. Congress needs to understand that the American’s perspective of a horse has shifted from being livestock to being a companion animal. For example, in a US survey by the Huffington Post, only thirteen percent of Americans sa...

  • Descriptive Essay Example: Livestock Sale at the County Fair

    1336 Words  | 3 Pages

    Livestock Sale at the County Fair Every year I get this feeling. The knots in my stomach are pulled tighter every time I pass through the narrow rock arch labeled with an aged sign reading, Welcome to the Delta County Fair Grounds. My eyes peer into the distance, and like every year, the park is full of commotion and energy. Kids swinging on the swings, teenagers showing off their new school clothes while sitting on the chipped green tables eating mazzo dogs, and the various types of food stands

  • The Effects of Grazing and Trampling Behaviors of Large-Sized Livestock on the Formation and Weathering Patterns of Soils

    2364 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Effects of Grazing and Trampling Behaviors of Large-Sized Livestock on the Formation and Weathering Patterns of Soils Introduction Walter Coppinger, a Professor of Geosciences at Trinity College in San Antonio and long-time observer of Montana geology, was the first person to describe to me the many problems of the western rangelands that have developed out of the over-grazing of cattle. From a hilltop among the upland slopes of Whitehall, Montana, he pointed out a few patches of bare

  • Livestock Farming Essay

    1234 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Role of Livestock Farming in Global Warming Livestock farming plays an integral role in the lives of individuals all over the world. Despite the magnitude of animal agriculture, research on its environment effects has been severely lacking in the past. Recent studies have shown that greenhouse gas emissions from livestock play a much bigger role in global warming than was once thought (Gill, 2009; Miller et. al 2013). The session that I propose will look at the greenhouse gasses emitted by livestock

  • Livestock Feeding Programmes

    2340 Words  | 5 Pages

    1) Identify (using pictures) and describe 10 or more common feedstuffs for farm animals (cattle, sheep and pigs). Roughages/Forages. Silage: Silage consists of green succulent forage that is harvested while retaining high moisture content, and stored under anaerobic conditions in a silo or ‘clamp’, whereby air is excluded. Modern methods, produce bails of silage, wrapped in plastic to exclude air in much same way, but are easier to handle and store. The fodder then undergoes a fermentation process

  • Informative Essay On Livestock Judging

    590 Words  | 2 Pages

    perfection we can catch excellence.” These wise words from Vince Lombardi is what motivates me when I judge a class. Livestock judging is something that is sometimes overlooked. You have a limited time to make a critical decision while being confident enough to answer questions about your decision. I first started judging my freshmen year, I was asked by my ag teacher if I wanted to do livestock judging and he told me that he thought I would be good at it. I remember my very first contest I was lost, there

  • Similarities Between Colonists And Indians

    988 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cows, pigs, horses, deer, and dogs. Those are just a few examples of common livestock. When one pictures American colonial times, he likely sees great big plains with teepees and Indians, as well as small colonial villages full of English colonists. He probably pictures those animals roaming around, but he almost certainly does not realize the importance they played in the events that unfolded between the colonists and the Indians. Many people may not imagine that the colonists and the Indians had

  • Houston Livestock Show Essay

    570 Words  | 2 Pages

    I believe that I should receive the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo scholarship because of the dedication and love for stock shows and pigs. In addition, it will help supplement the rising tuition cost to attend Texas Tech University. My family's income relies mainly on my family’s unpredictable financial income. Our income stems mostly from my father, who farms. His earnings fluctuate from year to year due to variables that come naturally with farming. Though he is an extremely hard worker, there

  • Pig Observation Report

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    “What are you doing? Why are you doing that?”, these questions come from anyone and everyone who doesn’t know about showing livestock or from someone who's new to showing. If I am being totally honest I love being asked these types of questions! I don’t care if it's about why I feed my goats separate, or why they are clipped. I truly enjoy talking to the public and explaining why things happen for a certain way. When I was six years old my older brother Ty got his first show pigs. At our first

  • Corporate Farming Persuasive Essay

    932 Words  | 2 Pages

    more time and allow farmers to produce less, have resulted in terrible animal treatment, as well as giving those animals unnecessary hormones and antibiotics”. (Comparing Agriculture of the Past, n.d.) Corporate farmers are able to produce more livestock at one time, since this is possible it makes it a problem generating off of the animal’s waste. Because of this problem this is causing the surrounding communities too suffer from pollution hazards from chemicals like ammonia and hydrogen. These