Litcius/Paper detail

An exploration of biodiversity limits to grazing ruminant milk and meat production

Kajsa Resare Sahlin, Line Gordon, Regina Lindborg, Johannes Piipponen, Pierre Van Rysselberge, Julia Rouet‐Leduc, Elin Röös

2024Nature Sustainability19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The production and consumption of animal-source foods must be transformed to mitigate negative environmental outcomes, including greenhouse gas emissions and land-use change. However, livestock are also key for food production and for livelihoods in some settings, and they can help preserve biodiversity and certain ecosystems. Previous studies have not yet fully explored sustainability limits to the use of grazing lands for food production in the context of biodiversity. Here we explore ‘biodiversity limits’ to grassland ruminant production by estimating the meat and milk production from domestic ruminants limited to grazing areas and stocking densities where livestock can contribute to the preservation or restoration of biodiversity. With biodiversity-friendly grazing intensities at 0–20% biomass removal depending on aridity, this take on biodiversity limits corresponds to 9–13% and 26–40% of the current grassland-based milk and meat production, respectively. This equals only 2.2 kg of milk and 0.8 kg of meat per capita per year, globally, but altered management and moving from meat-specialized to meat-and-dairy systems could increase the potential production while still remaining within this approach to biodiversity limits.

Topics & Concepts

GrazingRuminantBiodiversityProduction (economics)Milk productionAgricultural scienceAgroforestryBiotechnologyFood scienceBusinessAnimal scienceEnvironmental scienceBiologyPastureAgronomyEcologyEconomicsMacroeconomicsRangeland Management and Livestock EcologyAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental ImpactAgriculture, Land Use, Rural Development