Industrialized Livestock Production
ProjectOngoing
Investigators
Harold A. Mooney - Stanford University
Rosamond L. Naylor - Stanford University
Walter P. Falcon - Stanford University
Marshall Burke - Stanford University
Henning Steinfeld - Director at Livestock, Environment, and Development Initiative (FAO)
Jim Galloway - Professor at University of Virginia
Explosive growth in the global demand for meat has helped precipitate rapid changes in how that meat is produced. Livestock production operations are growing in intensity and scale, changing their location as a function of population growth and environmental regulation, and increasingly sourcing their inputs (such as feed) and sending their finished products abroad. This changing nature of production has important implications for environmental resources, implications which are often hidden by the complex nature of global trade. This project seeks to identify the web of effects that industrialized livestock has on global environmental resources, with particular attention paid to water, nitrogen, and land.
Publications
A Global Model Tracking Water, Nitrogen, and Land Inputs and Virtual Transfers from Industrialized Meat Production and Trade
Marshall Burke, Kirsten Oleson, Ellen McCullough, Joanne Gaskell
Environmental Modeling and Assessment (2008)
International trade in meat - The tip of the pork chop
Jim Galloway, Marshall Burke, Eric Bradford, Rosamond L. Naylor, Walter P. Falcon, Harold A. Mooney, Joanne Gaskell, Kirsten Oleson, Ellen McCollough, and others
Ambio vol. 36, 8 (2007)

Losing the Links Between Livestock and Land
Rosamond L. Naylor, Henning Steinfeld, Walter P. Falcon, James Galloway, Vaclav Smil, Eric Bradford, Jackie Alder, Harold A. Mooney
Science vol. 310, 5754 (2005)

