http://www.telegraphindia.com/1160817/jsp/opinion/story_102725.jsp#.V7PTc2UQjow

The beefy superpower

- What the census says about cows
Writing on the wall

Ashok V. Desai

Males are used for breeding, so a few burly fellows will be kept for
impregnation
The cow has been in the news since the present government came to
power. There has always been a difference of opinion between those who
think that the cow is a species of mother and those who consider it a
source of meat like a chicken or a goat. It is worth looking at the
facts of India's animal economy. They are a bit dated, since its last
census was held in 2012. But bovine conditions cannot have changed
much since then.

Cattle and buffaloes were not the only animals covered; the census
also covered horses, sheep, goats, pigs, donkeys, mules, mithuns,
yaks, camels, elephants, dogs, rabbits, ducks, turkeys, quails, and
other poultry. Indian cattle and foreign or mulatto cattle were
distinguished. So were Indian and foreign cocks, hens, ducks and
drakes; foreign chicks were termed "improved".

The number of canines went down from 19 million in 2007 to 11.6
million in 2012 - a fall of 39 per cent. Dogs declined by 32 per cent,
and bitches by 52 per cent; obviously Indians prefer male to female
dogs (these figures exclude strays). But they prefer female to male
goats (98 million females against 37 million males in 2012) and sheep
(51 million females against 15 million males). And their preference
for females is spreading to bovines; the number of males fell from 103
million in 2007 to 84 million in 2012, while the number of females
went up from 201 million to 215 million. The sex ratio is adverse to
males amongst yaks (35,000 against 42,000 in 2012), mithuns (129,000
against 169,000), and rabbits (255,000 against 337,000).

In general, if animals are kept for milk, males are useless. They are
necessary for breeding, so a few burly fellows will be kept for
impregnation; the rest will be killed or allowed to die. That is how
the cattle industry functions in the West. A farm will have rows and
rows of cows, but at most one or two bulls. They live miserable lives;
except when they are taken out once in a few weeks to mate with a cow,
they are just tied up. So, generally, they are very bad-tempered. If
they can break free and get a chance, they will attack humans. While
the meadows in Europe look very inviting in summer, it would be a good
idea to make sure there is no bull around. Indian bullocks are better
behaved because they are made to work, beaten if they misbehave, and
most of them are castrated. We let them live, but their lives are not
much better.

Whatever use they are put to, cattle kept in the West are more
efficient than in India; so foreign ones have steadily infiltrated
India and been interbred with local cattle. Between 1992 and 2012, the
number of Indian cattle fell from 189 million to 151 million, while
the number of foreign and hybrid cattle went up from 15 million to 40
million; the number of buffaloes went up from 105 to 109 million.
Foreign and hybrid cows give roughly six times as much milk as Indian
cows. They will breed faster, for their (male to female) sex ratio in
2012 was 15 per cent against 41 per cent amongst indigenous cattle. It
is still high in India because local bullocks continue to be used for
ploughing and haulage; but they are being rapidly replaced by
motorized vehicles as they have been abroad, and their proportion is
declining.

Buffaloes' sex ratio was 15 per cent, as for foreign cattle; both are
primarily used for milk and meat. Buffaloes yielded 4.5 million tons
of carabeef, half of which was exported, mainly to Vietnam, Egypt,
Malaysia and Thailand. Sheep and goats are used primarily for their
meat, and are bred as fast as possible, as their 2012 sex ratios - 20
and 18 per cent respectively - show. Pigs are obviously kept for their
meat, but surprisingly, their sex ratio is not skewed; it is close to
50 per cent. That, I guess, is because they breed so fast that there
is no need to keep special males for impregnation. There are so many
fowls, ducks and turkeys - 729 million in 2012 - that the department
of animal husbandry gave up on estimating their sex ratio. It also did
not try for elephants because, I suspect, its coverage is very poor:
it estimates their number to have gone up from 1000 in 2007 to 22000
in 2012, which is absurd.

Let us now take a longer view. Between 1992 and 2012, the number of
cattle fell from 205 to 191 million, while the share of foreign and
hybrid cattle went up from 7 to 21 per cent. Obviously, the higher
milk output of foreign cows is behind the decline in the number of
local cows. The number of cows went up from 103 to 123 million, while
the number of bullocks fell from 102 to 68 million; that is the impact
of mechanization. The number of female buffaloes went up from 67 to 93
million, while the number of male buffaloes fell from 17 to 16
million; this too can be traced to mechanization.

The number of sheep went up from 51 to 65 million. It rose most in
Assam, Uttarakhand and Jharkhand, which are relatively less densely
populated; it rose little in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Rajasthan and
Tamil Nadu, which have the largest number of sheep. Clearly,
shepherding is migrating from the old dry peninsular states to less
developed ones in the east. The number of goats went up from 115 to
135 million; it rose most in Assam, Bihar and Chhattisgarh. We see the
same migration in goats as in sheep to less densely and less developed
states. But the role of the two animals is very different. Sheep yield
wool and meat; goats, surprisingly, supply 31 per cent of the milk. A
goat is a poor man's cow.

The number of pigs fell from 128 to 103 million, mostly in Odisha,
eastern India and Andhra Pradesh. All these states have got richer
over the three decades; so it is unlikely that meat consumption has
fallen in any of them. But we do not see them leading in population
growth of goats and sheep, which do not seem to have replaced pigs.
How is this possible? My guess is one or both of two things have
happened. First, pig rearing technology has improved: either pigs have
grown fatter or they are growing faster or both. The other is that
there has been a shift from pork to chicken. The number of poultry
increased from 284 to 693 million in the two decades.

The most disquieting fact implicit in the USDA's figures is that the
only use of cows is to give milk, which they cannot unless they calve
every two years. So the 123 million cows produce 66 million calves a
year. But the population of Indian cows is falling, so at most, as
many calves are allowed to live as would replace the cows that die -
about 10-12 million. The rest - at least 55 million every year - are
being slaughtered or starved to death - in this nation of cow
worshippers.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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