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JUST THE FACTS
Water Management
FACT: High quality water is conserved and maintained by cattle producers.
High quality water is important to everyone. New technology is offering
cattle producters innovative ways to water their cattle. Producers are
experimenting with methods of encouraging less direct access by cattle to
water courses.
When given the option, cattle will tend to water at sites with a solid
base that provides good footing. Access ramps can be cuilt out into the
water using compacted pit run gravel. Producers can use a plastic mesh on
hte edge of watering sites to give cattle better footing and to decrease
water siltation. Research and practical experience indicates that cattle
will often choose to drink out of a water trough, rather than drink from a
stream or dugout.
Some water consumption facts are:
- 130 litres (29 gallons) of water is required to produce 1
kilogram (2.2 pounds of beef)
- 15 litres (3.3 gallons) of water is required to make 0.1
kilograms (1/4 pound) of hamburger
- 32 litres (7 gallons) of water is required to flush a toilet
- 135 litres (30 gallons) of water is used for the average
shower
- 35 litres (7.7 gallons) of water is used to process one can
of vegetables
- 5,678 litres (1249 gallons) of water is used to produce a
barrel of beer
The Average Canadian uses 350 litres (77 gallons) of water a day in
normal living activities.
A mature beef animal will drink between 35 and 66 litres (8 to 15 gallons)
of water per day, depending on the temperature. Most of the water cattle
drink returns to the soil as part of the natural recycling process. In
otherwords the average person uses as much water as between 5 to 9 head of
cattle per day.
Clean water is a goal of cattle producers. Producers are voluntarily
changing management practices to improve water quality for themselves and
for their communities. These practices include moving wintering areas away
from streams, using ridges and ditches to divert corral run off into
lagoons, and sloping corrals away from water sources.
Irrigation is not widely used in Canada to produce feed for cattle. In
fact, only about 1% of Canada's total farmland is irrigated.
Land Management -
effective and sensible use
FACT: Cattle production occurs primarily on land unsuitable for
cultivation.
Worldwide, grazing more than doubles the land area that can be used to
produce food for people. In Canada, about 68 million hectares of land is
classified as "agricultural land". Approximately 30% of Canada's
farmland is NOT considered to be economically or environmentally suitable
for cultivation, but does support sustained ruminant livestock grazing.
Because of climate, topography, access, or land owner choice, almost 24%
of Canada's agricultural land is uncultivated native grasslands. Another
6% is maintained as tame grass pasture land.
Cattle are an important element in a balanced and sustainable agriculture
system. They utilize the forages and legumes which are part of a crop
rotation system to improve soil fertility and decrease soil erosion .
Forage crops used for cattle feed are an important part of most
sustainable cropping systems. They help to decrease soil erosion, improve
soil fertility, and assist in pest management.
80% to 85% of the feed consumed by cattle is made up of grasses and
forages that are inedible by people. The type of grain fed to cattle
(normally barley or corn) is generally not the same quality as that used
for human consumption. Cattle often provide a market for weather damaged
cereal grains originally grown for human consumption. There is no shortage
of grain in the world, only and inability to distribute it to those in
need.
It takes approximately 2.2 kilograms (5 pounds) of feed grain to
produce 0.5 kilograms (1 pound) of edible beef. This is comparable to
the feed grain conversion efficiency of other major meat animal.
Livestock industries in developed countries also have an important
buffering effect on cereal grain prices and food supplies. As grain prices
rise, the amount of grain used in cattle feedlots decreases. The cattle
industry can utilize surplus grains in times of over-production, or reduce
that use in times of scarcity through shorter finishing periods and an
increased use of by-products.
In certain regions of Canada, climatic conditions restrict the production
of food grains suitable for human consumption and favour the production of
feed grains for livestock. In fact, food grains on average yield less per
hectare than feed grains.
Manure Management
FACT: Almost all animal manure is incorporated back into the soil for crop
production or sold as natural fertilizer to gardeners.
Animal manure is a valuable source of soil organic matter an nutrients.
When properly applies, it improves soil structure and increases water
retention.
When soils are cultivated for crops, organic matter is used by the growing
plants. Replenishment of those nutrients is essential to sustained and
economically viable crop production.
Producers are using manure management techniques to significantly reduce
chances of ground or surface water contaimination. Ongoing research is
assisting producers to determine appropriate manure application rates
using soil testing and manure analysis.
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada scientists have determined that the heavy
application of manure to soil is an effective way to restore the
productivity of saline and other degraded soils. Manure deposited on
pasture and rengelands is dispersed naturally and acts as a fertilizer for
the grasses.
In some areas, producers are planting trees and grasses along streams to
help filter barn yard run off.
Biodiversity
FACT: Cattle grazing on properly managed range and pasture land is
compatible with wildlife and wildlife habitat, and in many cases
contributes to increased wildlife numbers.
Cattle producers are long-time partners with the environment and work to
conserve wildlife and its habitat. To ensure the coexistence of species,
total environment management is the focus of producers.
Many producers are second, third and fourth gereration families who have
built up extensive knowledge about good management of the many different
and complex range and pasture ecosystems they utilize.
Before cattle, bison grazed the Prairies and parts of the aspen parkland.
Removal of grazing animals would lead to significant habitat changes and
the loss or decrease of many prairie plant and animal species.
Improved grazing management, more widely available watering sites and
improved winter feed supplies have increased wildlife numbers in many
areas. Good range management ensures the maintenance of natural
ecosystems.
Cattle production, species biodiversity, recreation and wildlife habitat
are all possible, side by side through education, awareness and
cooperative management. Cattle producers are working with conservation and
recreational groups to enhance habitat in many areas. Voluntary habitat
enhancement and stewardship programs are in place with a variety of
organizations. Initiatives include practices such as direct pasture
seeding, native grass cropping, man-made wetlands, and rotational and
deferred grazing strategies.
Many successful examples can be cited from our ongoing work with a total
environment management. Producers are proud to play an important role in
the conservation of wildlife and its habitat.
Global Warming
FACT: Canadian cattle contribute approximately 0.025% of the
greenhouse effect from methane emissions in the world.
Carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, methane and chlorofluorocarbons are called
greenhouse gases. These gases form an envelope around the earth to contain
our atmosphere and decrease the amount of ultraviolet rays that reach the
surface.
Plants use carbon dioxide to produce cellulose and starch during the
photosynthesis process. The methane emitted by cattle comes from the
digestion of plant material in the rumen (the first of the four stomachs).
The carbon production from cattle, in the form of methane belched into the
air, is not the same as the carbon produced when fossil fuels are burned.
Cattle are recycling carbon that was once in the atmosphere. This carbon
is either sequestered by the soil or by the grasses the grazing cattle
eat. Cattle are a link in the nutrient recycling process.
Cattle are part of the carbon cycle. Carbon in the atmosphere is taken in
by plants and converted to cellulose and starch during the photosynthesis
process. This plant material is then digested by cattle who release some
of the carbon contained in the plant back into the atmosphere in the form
of methane.
A study at Cornell University, New York, calculated that the entire beef
cattle population in the world contributes 1.0% of the greenhouse gases in
the atmosphere.
The average daily production of greenhouse gas by a cow is equal to
that of a car driven 3.2 kilometers (2 miles). In fact, driving to the
store to buy groceries produces 800 times more greenhouse gas than does
the production of a hamburger. One landfill site in the Vancouver area
creates more methane emissions each year than all of the cattle in the
province of Britsh Columbia, Canada.
Deforestation
FACT: Reducing beef consumption in Canada will have no impact on
rates of tropical deforestation.
A recent study at the University of Guelph, Ontarion, found that the
social and economic conditions in South and Central America are
responsible for deforestation. The study further states that in order to
slow forest depletion in Sout and Central America, emphasis should be
placed on domestic causes of forest depletion rather than on North
American beef conumption.
Beef imports into North America hve been declining, but forest depletion
in South and Central America is continuing. The study identifies regional
development, subsistence production, shifting cultivation, fuelwood and
charcoal production, the debt burden, forest fires, pasture development,
and national agricultural policies as potential contributors to forest
depletion.
Causes of Deforestation:
- peasant agriculture - 77,200 square miles/year
- timber ranching - 28,000 square miles/year
- cattle ranching - 7,720 square miles/year
Canada imports approximately 17% of its beef needs - primarily from the
United States, Australia and New Zealand. Canada imports less than 2.3% of
its beef from South America. This beef is imported only as canned
products.
Currently, Canada does not import beef from Central American countries.
Fresh and frozen beef imports from South America are strictly prohibited
because of the danger of spreading foot and mouth disease to Canadian
cattle. Therefore, none of the hamburger chains in Canada are allowed to
obtain fresh or frozen beef from South America.
Curtailing beef consumption in Canada will only hurt domestic beef
producers and thousands of other Canadians employed in the industry.
Healthy Cattle
FACT: Canada has one of the healthiest national cattle herds and one of
the most wholesome beef products in the world.
Producers use livestock medication and vaccination products to make sure
their cattle are healthy. Antibiotics are used in cattle production to
treat disease. These products go through the same rigorous testing as
products licenced for human use.
Implanting a growth-enhancing hormone in the ears of cattle helps produce
leaner beef. When an implant is used, hormones are gradually released into
the bloodstream to increase lean beef production by 10% to 15%. This
lowers the cost of beef to consumers.
The human body continuously produces hormones in quantities substantially
greater than that which would be consumed by eating beef. For example,
scientific studies show no significant difference between the amount of
estrogen in cattle treated with a growth-promoting implant and the amount
found in an untreated animal.
Estrogen Content in Some Common Foods
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Steer (beef) implanted
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100 g (3 1/2 oz)
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1.4 - 2.5*
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Steer (beef) non-implanted
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100 g (3 1/2 oz)
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1.2 - 2.0*
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Cabbage
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100 g (3 1/2 oz)
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2400*
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Peas
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100 g (3 1/2 oz)
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400*
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Wheat germ
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15 ml (1 tbsp.)
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152*
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Soy bean oil
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15 ml (1 tbsp.)
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28,370*
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Milk
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250 ml (1 cup)
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34*
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* Measurements are in nanograms. A nanogram is one
billionth of a gram, which can be compared to one blade of grass in an
entire football field.
Canadian producers have an excellent long-standing reputation for
compliance with Canadian regulations for antibiotics, pesticides and
hormones based on the random and suspect residue testing program.
FACT: The success of the Canadian cattle industry relies on the
humane treatment of animal.
The industry took a lead role in developing a Code of Practice for the
care and handling of farm animals: Beef Cattle. This document is the
result of expertise held by the provincial cattle organizations,
government and the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies.
The Federal Health of Animals Act regulates the care and handling
of livestock throughout the industry. This includes the humane treatment
of cattle and governs transportation, and the care, handling and
disposition of animals at processing plants.
Cattle producers know that badly treated or stressed cattle will not
reproduce or grow normally. Any animal owners causing animals unnecessary
suffering face monetary fines, possible charges under the Criminal Code
and the removal of their animals.
Nutrition
FACT: Beef is an important source of essential nutrients.
Today's lean beef supplies 12 essential nutrients. Beef is an excellent
source of protein, niacin, vitamins B6 and B12, phosphorus and zinc. It is
also rich in iron, riboflavin, magnesium and potassium.
The iron in beef is in a form called "heme" iron, which the body
more readily uses than the iron found in plant foods (eg. spinach,
cereals, legumes) or eggs.
The latest Health Canada nutrient information shows that
through genetic selection and feeding regimes, today's beef is, on
average, 50% leaner and 21% lower in cholesterol than it was 20 years ago.
A serving of broiled inside round steak has as little fat and cholesterol
as an equal serving of roast chicken without the skin, or as little fas as
125 millilitres (1/2 cup) of regular cottage cheese.
Canada's Food Guide to Healthy Eating suggests 2-3
servings (50 - 100 grams each) of lean meat per day. A serving size is
approximately the size of a deck of cards. The Nutrition
Recommendations for Canadians, 1990, states that we should
consume no more than 30% of calories from fat, and no more than 10% of
calories from saturated fat. For a person who consumes 2,000 calories
daily, this translates into no more than 67 grams of total fat and 22
grams of which could be saturated fat. It is also recommended that,
regardless of total caloric intake, cholesterol intake should no exceed
300 milligrams per day.
Lean beef fits well within these guidelines. For example, a 100 gram
serving of broiled sirloin steak, trimmed of visible fat, provides 186
calories, 6.7 grams of fat, 2.7 grams of saturated fat and 72 milligrams
of cholesterol.
Data from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada's Nutrient
Assessment Program, shows that red meat, such as beef,
contributes only 6.4% of the fat in Canadians' diets. In fact, the major
source of fat in our diets is from fats and oils which are often added
during the preparation when foods are fried, during the food processing of
baked goods, as well as when dressing is added to salads. These fats and
oils contribute up to 31.4% of the fat in our diets, almost 5 times
greater than that from beef.
High intakes of dietary fat have been associated with increased risks of
heart disease and colon cancer. The data shows that beef can be part of a
daily balanced diet that is both low in fat and nutrient dense.
Science & Technology
FACT: Science and technology play an important role within the
beef cattle industry.
The Canadian cattle industry is pursuing technologies that will help it
remain competitive, improve the quality and consistency of the product for
consumers, and increase food safety standards.
Video imaging and real-time ultrasound are used to grade cattle and the
resulting products. These technologies measure product yield, which is
important to being competitive. In addition, a variety of quality factors
can be measured.
Through the use of assessment electronic probes, the collagen and
tenderness of beef are tested. This technology places the Canadian cattle
industry as a world leader for providing tender beef products.
Electronic identification of cattle, when linked with video imaging and
ultrasound techniques, benefits the industry through better animal
selection.
Biotechnology is being used to create improved medicines to fight animal
diseases and to rid animals of parasites. Modern biotechnology can help
develop hardier, more productive livestock faster than was possible with
traditional methods. Some of the finding of biotechnology include:
Monoclonal Antibodies to diagnose diseases, DNA probes to detect and
predict inherited genetic disorders, and DNA fingerprinting to identify
the parentage of specific animals.
All products derived from biotechnology are evaluated under safety acts
and regulations.
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada conducts extensive research in targeted
areas to develop new processes, improved products and safety measuures.
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