I am in favour of continuing to farm animals on places where you can’t grow crops, simply because i value humans higjer than animals and this increases overall food supply. But today we are talking mainly about animals that are feedet with plants. If the grassland cant be used to grow eatable plants it can stay grassland and have cows on it.
But the places where you can grow crops are wide flat open spaces, which would get re(?)vegetated with woody plants when you take off the grazing pressure.
There’s pretty small grassland which has not been converted to some kind of use in the developed world, and I think in the developing world, too.
But the places where you can grow crops are wide flat open spaces, which would get re(?)vegetated with woody plants when you take off the grazing pressure.
Depends on the climate. A semi-desert (e.g. a lot of Western US) is a wide flat open space, but it doesn’t change over to a forest without the grazing pressure.
Some. However the areas with grazing (usually non-intensive and by cows, not goats or sheep) aren’t much different from areas without grazing. You just won’t get forests in sufficiently arid climates. Brush, yes, some trees along the usually dry creek beds, yes, forests, no.
I am in favour of continuing to farm animals on places where you can’t grow crops, simply because i value humans higjer than animals and this increases overall food supply. But today we are talking mainly about animals that are feedet with plants. If the grassland cant be used to grow eatable plants it can stay grassland and have cows on it.
But the places where you can grow crops are wide flat open spaces, which would get re(?)vegetated with woody plants when you take off the grazing pressure.
There’s pretty small grassland which has not been converted to some kind of use in the developed world, and I think in the developing world, too.
Depends on the climate. A semi-desert (e.g. a lot of Western US) is a wide flat open space, but it doesn’t change over to a forest without the grazing pressure.
Does much grazing occur there? Because if not, then this is somewhat irrelevant.
Some. However the areas with grazing (usually non-intensive and by cows, not goats or sheep) aren’t much different from areas without grazing. You just won’t get forests in sufficiently arid climates. Brush, yes, some trees along the usually dry creek beds, yes, forests, no.