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Thursday
Milk Nutrition Facts
90%
of American Milk Comes from a Single Breed of Cow
Throughout the world, there are more than 6 billion
consumers of milk and milk products. Over 750 million people live within dairy
farming households. Milk is a key contributor to improving nutrition and food
security particularly in developing countries. Improvements in livestock and
dairy technology offer significant promise in reducing poverty and malnutrition
in the world.
Throughout the developed world, the dairy industry has become
dominated by one remarkable breed of cow, the Holstein-Friesian. Almost two-thirds of dairy cows in Europe, and 90%
of dairy cows in North America, are Holsteins. Other breeds are still reared in
places, such as the Jersey, the Normande, the Ayrshire and the Guernsey, but
over the last few decades more and more dairy farmers have turned to the
Holstein.
The breed currently averages
7655 liters/year throughout 3.2 lactations, with pedigree animals averaging
8125 liters/year over an average of 3.43 lactations. By adding, lifetime
production therefore stands at around 26,000
liters. The Holstein is the most efficient milk machine ever created, turning
relatively small amounts of feed into huge volumes of milk and butterfat.
This has long been known, but recent advances in artificial
insemination techniques in mass breeding programmes have produced huge numbers
of these cows around the world. But there are concerns that this concentration
on a single breed makes the dairy industry very vulnerable. If, for instance, the
Holstein were to fall victim to a new mutation of a parasite, virus or
bacteria, the effects could be disastrous. With so few other cows to fall back
on, the world could suddenly find itself almost without milk and butter.
Livestock breeders have been very successful at breeding cows to produce huge
quantities of milk, but they have never attempted to breed in disease
resistance.
The Holstein could be vulnerable to global warming, too. Holsteins
are very sensitive to heat, and in the hotter countries where they are raised,
farmers already use expensive sprinkler systems, fans and cooling ponds to keep
them cool. Any rise in global temperatures could see Holsteins wilting around
the world, and there are far too few other breeds to take up the slack.
This concentration on a single breed in the dairy industry
has been mirrored right across the farming world, and is raising worries. Over
the last century, more than 90% of crop varieties have disappeared. In China,
more than 90% of wheat varieties have been lost in the last half-century. Over
the past fifteen years, 300 out of the 6,000 farm animal breeds identified by
the Food and Agriculture Organization have become extinct, and two breeds are
now being lost forever each week.
Such a concentration on so few strains and breeds has undoubtedly
brought huge benefits in terms of production, but this not only brings with it
a frightening vulnerability to catastrophic failure, but also a massive loss of
choice and variety. Half a century ago, milk could be from Jersey, Guernsey or
any one of a huge range of different breeds of cow, each with its own
distinctive flavour. Now milk is essentially milk, which means Holstein milk.
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