Is it better for the environment if I choose to be a vegetarian?

PTSpyder

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You could argue that yes, since animals cause a lot of methane *specifically cows* that not eating animals could help the environment. However, you arnt asking the right question. Yes, becoming a vegetarian does make you a douchebag.
 

Glerken

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Griever18 said:
No. Long answer: No, and it's not actually a healthier lifestyle like everyone says. DON'T BELIEVE THE COMMUNIST LIES! SAVE THE CHEERLEADER, SAVE THE WORLD!

Sorry about that. I'm all jacked up on peach soda.
I've never known peach soda to make someone hyper.

On topic: I'd say it doesn't help the environment but it stops you from hurting it a little.
 

Raddragon

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I respect your opinion. You're not just doing this for the envyroment and for the animals,but also for yourself.

www.meat.org

And huh...I guess viewer discretion is advised. Either be ingorant and blissfull or be brave face the truth right now.
 

cas

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someone who eats meat leaves a larger carbon imprint on the world than a vegetarian over the course of their lives so yes it is better for the environment if you choose to be a vegetarian
 

PurpleRain

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Finnboghi said:
This means you require a source of protein other than meat.

The most common substitute is tofu.

Which requires warm temperatures, lots of rainfall, and rich soil to grow.

The best source of such conditions being a rainforest.

So, in essence, to grow soy beans to produce tofu for vegetarians in a cost effective manner, people are simply cutting down the rainforests and replanting them with soy beans.
Two points with that, not all vegetarians eat or like tofo. I hate the stuff. Secondly, we can make artifical rainfall and rich soil. They're called hoses. They're pretty new and a lot of design is still in the works... okay, I'm being sarcastic, sorry. But just to build a tofo farm is no reason to knock down the Amazon.

As for the OP, yeah, it would help a lot. Less land clearing to make way for animal farms. Live stock need a lot of room to graze.
I can also bring up the topic of Wind energy as well, seeing how none of the farmers want to build one where their cows dwell the greedy... (Shakes fist).

Also, I don't understand this whole "Meat rules! Let's consume an animal!" argument anymore. I like meat, but becomming vegetarian was nothing outstanding or hard. The food's the same, and just as tasty. The only thing you're missing is the texture. It was really no sweet off anyone's back.

I'm posting now, because I missed the last vegetarian argument, and a lot of good points were brought up in that one.

EDIT

Seldon2639 said:
jockslap said:
Not saying i intend to, but the topic came up in school but we never really got around to discussing it, so i would like to know what you guys think, and also if i could get some sources that would be cool too, because i have a feeling this might end up being a project.
There are two parts of the possible benefit, neither of which are particularly reasonable. The first is that you could reduce the amount of effort and resources (and hence pollution) that go into your food. If you eat locally grown produce, rather than meat, there'd be less transportation.

Admittedly, organic farming is actually unsustainable (it could only support about 4 billion people, out of the 6 billion we have on the planet). But, you could try to reduce the emissions from trucks. But, not really, and more on this in a second.

The other choice would be that you could reduce the number of cows raised. Less demand should mean less supply, meaning fewer cows.

Now, it's time for me to do the "fungible commodity" dance. The steps are that I refuse to pay for something, so someone else buys it. Even if you buy local produce, the produce from other states will be transported. Same thing with meat. Whether *you* eat meat or not, the meat that's already going to be made has already been born, and is being raised. Those cows will die either way, and will be made into meat. That meat will be shipped to stores. Either you buy it, someone else does, or it goes to waste. It will not effect how many cows exist, or are slaughtered.
Yes it does. Sales will go down. Farmers won't buy and raise as much cattle. Less meat to go to waste.

Also, with the transporting idea, it takes more to transport meat. Firstly from the farms to the slaughter house, then onto the butchers or wherever. Plants get harvested at the farms and brought to the markets. Where I live, all products are locally grown so less transport still.
 

Matronadena

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sorry for making this go for so long, but I believe I have some qualifications on this level.


on the environmental level historically heavy agriculture has done more in the way of damage to the planet than grazing/slaughter ever has.

while grazing animals put out high amounts of methane ( vegetarians do as well) it as at much lower levels than many advocacy groups like to claim. a whole heard of cows puts out less in the way of volatile chemicals a year than a single car does in one day...something like Yellow stone national park, or any average geo thermal, and oceanic vent, or volcano ( even dormant) put out more chemicals in a minute than the human population can in 10 years.

heavy agriculture on the other hand not only strips native soil of nutrients, it's responsible for spreading non native fungus and bacteria to local, native plant species, alters the PH balance in the ground, kills off native grasses meant to keep the soil and earth from blowing into the atmosphere, it's devastated natural ecosystems, as it displaces natural wildlife it cuts off their food...driving animals into more populated areas, or in some cases the complete loss of the dominant natural species.


take the dust bowl of the U.S. This was agriculture gone wrong. During western expansion huge amounts of sub-prime land was sold for pennies an acre, leading to a boom of people from the big eastern cities to buy up and attempt to farm... the removal of the natural grasses, which when replaced by wheat, corn, and other grans and plants were unable to contain the soil and led to vast amounts being left to dry, and eventually blow into the air.

this caused a chain reaction, and soon black storms swept the west, and mid west eventually reaching the east coast. The storms of dust generated their own heat, leading to mass droughts that lasted for years, horrid air quality, and health conditions that lead to the death of thousands of people " many of them were infants, small children and elderly"

this lead to many acts around the world to limit what can be grown where, and when, and how much land is allocated to this....one nation who has not enforced this is China, who currently is suffering their own dust bowl.




on a physical level

Soy does have the complex proteins in smaller portions that is often found in meats, true...however they don't contain the acids in meat that the human body needs, more important is the trans-fats that is needed to sustain a healthy BRAIN... not only to the acids in the trans fats keep the brain fed, more importantly they act as insulation for the neurons.

one reason that omniverous, and carnivorous animals ( including humans) show higher levels of complex thought processes, social structures, forethought, advanced communication, more complex, and effective vision is directly related to meat in their diet, be it from insects, or large prey... The evolution of humanity was directly connected to larger amounts of meats into the diet...as we worked up to scavenging kills for the marrow, to cooking the meat not only afforded us time to form stronger social bonds, and preserve out food longer, it drove us to develop advanced hunting strategy ( which required more communication, better ability to read the land and use it to an advantage, follow the stars to aid in following prey, to design new technologies)
It was when Homo sapient ( the first wave ) were limited to the coastal areas that the diet of largely fish led to a massive cognitive leap, This was directly linked in to the fats, and acids fish are rich in...As many know homo Sapient was physically modern, but the mental capacity was lacking.. the change in brain chemistry led to the evolution of homo sapient sapient...modern man.. us..

So without a need for meat our species would never have become what it is today, and we do still need it, supplements can take an edge off, but they all lack the primary chemicals for brain development ( one reason Doctors all over the world stress NEVER to put a child on a vegetarian diet) children who are forced on one show alot of developmental problems, or a higher rate of things like epileptic seizures, disorders in the nervous system, and even weaker immune systems.


A.L.McDargh PHD
Social Anthropology
University of Edinburgh
 

teisjm

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Cows (and other pre-slaugthered meat) passing gas is pouring Carbon-dioxide into the ozone layer, which damages it. Therefore we should eat lots of steaks so the more meaty part of the worlds fauna doesn't increase too much in numbers
 

Horticulture

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Like a bunch of other folks have said, it takes a lot less energy to produce 1 kilocal of veggies than of meat. Bad agricultural practices are a legitimate concern but...livestock eat that stuff, too. Raising a cow/pig/other delicious beast means we have to raise that much more plant matter, not less.

So, a typical veg. diet does require less acreage to support and hence is more 'sustainable.'

Matronadena said:
Soy does have the complex proteins in smaller portions that is often found in meats, true...however they don't contain the acids in meat that the human body needs, more important is the trans-fats that is needed to sustain a healthy BRAIN... not only to the acids in the trans fats keep the brain fed, more importantly they act as insulation for the neurons.
This is inaccurate. The human body is capable of synthesizing complex amino acids (proteins) entirely from vegetable sources. Furthermore, myelin, the insulating sheath on axons, is not formed from a trans-fat. Trans-fats are bad for you. Don't eat them. You will do fine with vegetables as long you eat a sensible mix (protip: black beans are great)
 

PurpleRain

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teisjm said:
Cows (and other pre-slaugthered meat) passing gas is pouring Carbon-dioxide into the ozone layer, which damages it. Therefore we should eat lots of steaks so the more meaty part of the worlds fauna doesn't increase too much in numbers
But we already control their breeding patterns. Eat less meat and the farmers won't breed and raise as many cows. Eat more, and it's the exact opposite.
 

Matronadena

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Horticulture said:
Like a bunch of other folks have said, it takes a lot less energy to produce 1 kilocal of veggies than of meat. Bad agricultural practices are a legitimate concern but...livestock eat that stuff, too. Raising a cow/pig/other delicious beast means we have to raise that much more plant matter, not less.

So, a typical veg. diet does require less acreage to support and hence is more 'sustainable.'

Matronadena said:
Soy does have the complex proteins in smaller portions that is often found in meats, true...however they don't contain the acids in meat that the human body needs, more important is the trans-fats that is needed to sustain a healthy BRAIN... not only to the acids in the trans fats keep the brain fed, more importantly they act as insulation for the neurons.
This is inaccurate. The human body is capable of synthesizing complex amino acids (proteins) entirely from vegetable sources. Furthermore, myelin, the insulating sheath on axons, is not formed from a trans-fat. Trans-fats are bad for you. Don't eat them. You will do fine with vegetables as long you eat a sensible mix (protip: black beans are great)

I was not really meaning to what can and can't be broken down, Its more about quantity is where I was getting,

and I stress dietary needs do vary person to person

for me personally an all vegi diet will kill me, several thousand pounds in lab tests, doctor visitations, and dietitians made it quiet clear that I need acids, and proteins in quantities only found in meats...

but I do note that too carnivorous a diet is not good for a human as well... so naturally a moderation is something all need to consider in everything.

thats what being an omnivore is about...we have the ability to eat, and extract nutrients from just about everything, that said we biologically do need to find a balance and subsidize our needs.

only way to be 100% free of all that is to go to a replacement diet ( as in all food in pill form) but then again that poses gastrointestinal problems, atleast until we can sorta evolve out of that >.<
 

Lios

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I really don't think becoming a vegetarian will help the environment at all... I don't even think it will affect it in the slightest.


Also, keep "eating meat is wrong" discussion out of this thread, thank you.
 

teisjm

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PurpleRain said:
teisjm said:
Cows (and other pre-slaugthered meat) passing gas is pouring Carbon-dioxide into the ozone layer, which damages it. Therefore we should eat lots of steaks so the more meaty part of the worlds fauna doesn't increase too much in numbers
But we already control their breeding patterns. Eat less meat and the farmers won't breed and raise as many cows. Eat more, and it's the exact opposite.
'

Don't you dare take away my reason to stuff my face with tasty meat! or i'll dress you up as a juicy steak and chase you down with a fork!
 

Doug

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Technically, yeah, because you use less land per 'unit diet' of veg/fruit than you do meat due to energy lost between photosythnise, the animal eating/disgesting it, and you getting your energy from the animal. However....
DannyBoy451 said:
Depends if the fruits and vegetables you're eating are being flown in from all over the world, I guess.
And also some land simply isn't stable for crops - so grass, which can feed animals, is usable, making unstable land good for grazing.
 

Scary_Bob

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You becoming vegetarian will not aid the environment. Humanity becoming vegetarian might do so. Depends on whether you choose to act on principle alone I guess.
 

nekolux

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*opens up biology notes*
Short answer : yes.
Long answer : Maybe, it'll have to be empirically tested at each decisive step.
Firstly, in an ecosystem 20% of the producer's energy is given to the next level in the food chain. That is, grass producing 1000J of energy would give 200J to a cow eating it.
And any subsequent levels after that the energy transferred is only a meager 10% AFTER the primary organism uses it. ( 200J to cow, cow uses 100J and then passes on 10J to humans who eat the beef. Numbers are highly inaccurate but i haven't slept the whole night and i'm running on diet dr pepper )

Secondly, the amount of work done to upkeep animals is much higher than the work done to upkeep plants. Also you have to remember that when you upkeep animals you do not eliminate the work done on the plants so you're essentially adding another level of work. ( Vegetarian diet requires work on plants. Meat diet requires work done on plants AND THEN work done on the animals. )

From the above two points you can see that eating meat is HIGHLY inefficient.

However consider the following points.

To make up for the lack of proteins many people will eat soy, spinach etc. However, soy is found to be carcinogenic. The amount of soy you're consuming each day to get the right amount of protein would vastly increase your chances of getting cancer. ( Of course with the reduction of many other carcinogenic factors in meat, ie. Biological amplification, you'd probably even out.

What bikeninja said about meat rotting in our gut is actually false. Plants are the ones that humans cannot digest. Human intestines have an extremely small caecum which is what most herbivores have to store bacteria which helps break down cellulose. Cellulose is of course what plants are mostly made of. ( Cellulose is different from STARCH which is what the plants STORE their food as. )

Proteins are actually digested very quickly, even quicker than carbohydrates in fact. They are digested in the stomach by protease and very quickly assimilated into the bloodstream.

bikeninja said:
First of all, humans actually aren't meant to eat animals, our body doesn't even digest meat, it literally rots in out stomach for about a week before it breaks down enough for our system to handle it. The average human body has an extra 7-10 pounds of rotting meat in our systems at any given time.
Secondly, what SmilingKitsune said is correct, killing cows produces a LOT of Methane into our air, the top methane producers are slaughter farms and garbage dumps.
Raising cows is also difficult, they pollute the land win their excess (poop and peepee, kiddies) and if it is not properly cared for, then it seeps through the ground and into water sources. Now, that takes alot of excretion to happen, but thankfully, mass cow farms have more then enough cattle to speed up the process. This isn't a problem, if only the farmers could properly clean up the farmland, but it is just too hard with so many cows and land, so it is often done not to standard, or not at all.
Just a random fact, if every one had 1 day a week that they didn't eat meat products, it would be the same as if around 15 million cars weren't running for that day.

I'm not a vegetarian, so please don't start saying I am, I just eat organically grown food. Less pollution, no chemicals used, and I never liked the fact that my cows were beefed up on steroids anyways.
^ 4 years studying biology and a gold medal in biology olympiad says you're wrong. Read above. A simple wiki search on the human stomach will tell you you're wrong too. Most of the protein you intake is digested and assimilated by the time it exits your stomach and into your duodenum

Edit: Sauce here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pepsinogen breaks proteins down into peptides
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trypsin then breaks peptides into amino acids which our body uses.

Horticulture said:
Like a bunch of other folks have said, it takes a lot less energy to produce 1 kilocal of veggies than of meat. Bad agricultural practices are a legitimate concern but...livestock eat that stuff, too. Raising a cow/pig/other delicious beast means we have to raise that much more plant matter, not less.

So, a typical veg. diet does require less acreage to support and hence is more 'sustainable.'

Matronadena said:
Soy does have the complex proteins in smaller portions that is often found in meats, true...however they don't contain the acids in meat that the human body needs, more important is the trans-fats that is needed to sustain a healthy BRAIN... not only to the acids in the trans fats keep the brain fed, more importantly they act as insulation for the neurons.
This is inaccurate. The human body is capable of synthesizing complex amino acids (proteins) entirely from vegetable sources. Furthermore, myelin, the insulating sheath on axons, is not formed from a trans-fat. Trans-fats are bad for you. Don't eat them. You will do fine with vegetables as long you eat a sensible mix (protip: black beans are great)
Dont forget the dendrons as well ;-)
Oh and i believe the 'good' fatty acid you're looking for is the omega-3 fatty acid.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omega_3
 

chefassassin2

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Brotherofwill said:
Abedeus said:
Brotherofwill said:
No, can't see any obvious benefits

Abedeus said:
Food chain and eating animals is a natural thing. Unless you are eating humans, then it's not a natural thing.
Why wouldn't that be natural? Quite a few animals eat their own species, even some apes do.
Human's don't do that.

We are talking about human beings.
I was more questioning why it wouldn't be natural, rather than why we don't do it. Humans have been known to do it.
We as humans in the modern age don't eat other humans as a sign of morality and ethics. In older centuries, the American Indians and other peoples of Scandinavia and europe were known to indulge in cannabalism for religious and spiritual reasons. American Indian warriors would eat a piece of their foe's hearts because they believed that the power of the warrior would come into the tribesman eating it.
 

Inverse Skies

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If you're going to become vegetarian it's a huge commitment, so think carefully about the choice you're about to make and don't base it on a flimsy reason such as 'the environment'. Do it because you really believe in it and nothing else.
 

Ixtli

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Short answer NO

Long answer, No because vegetation produces a large amount of CO2 in the early stages of it's development. Only when plants reach a certain stage (which varies on the plant) do they begin to reduce our CO2 content. Sadly if your eating them, most generally don't reach that stage.