Horowhenua Chronicle

Imposing concept of varied diet on animals inappropri­ate

- Dr Jacqueline Rowarth Dr Jacqueline Rowarth is an adjunct professor with Lincoln University and a farmer-elected director on the Boards of DairyNZ and Ravensdown. The analysis and conclusion­s above are her own. jsrowarth@gmail.com

A“varied diet” is in response to food availabili­ty and an attempt to restrain our own inclinatio­ns to indulge. Imposing this recent and muddled human concept on animals is inappropri­ate.

Children like lollies. Not always, but generally. Sweet-free aisles at the supermarke­t are in place to avoid trouble.

In adulthood, doughnuts are a popular choice to meet the need, and research involving bagels has shown that the most popular choice has the combinatio­n of sugar for instant energy and fat for long-term calorie maximisati­on.

Energy has been the priority during most of human history when we have eaten whatever we could hunt, gather, scavenge, barter or steal.

The advent of modern agricultur­e and trade has replaced “Is there anything to eat?” with “what would you like to eat?”

And while children might still respond “icecream”, most of us know that focusing on sugar and fat for energy that we aren’t going to use will lead to weight gain.

Despite this, most of our actual purchasing decisions are still based on taste.

The Internatio­nal Food Informatio­n Council (USA) states that purchasing decisions haven’t changed for a decade: taste remains number one, followed by cost and convenienc­e and then health.

The European Commission published “Making our food fit for the future — Citizens’ expectatio­ns” in December.

The research involved more than 27,000 people in 27 European countries. Almost 60 per cent of people responded that eating a variety of foods and having a balanced diet with “more fruit and vegetables” constitute­d a healthy and sustainabl­e diet.

Breaking down the results by country, it appeared that the higher the GDP per capita, the greater emphasis on variety.

Considerat­ion of impact on the environmen­t was similarly associated — richer countries being more aware of environmen­tal footprints than other countries.

However, even the most concerned country, Sweden, reported only 27 per cent of respondent­s being influenced by environmen­tal impact when making purchasing decisions.

People make choices based on taste, not environmen­t.

So do animals.

In the productive sector, farm animals are still focused on energy. A New Zealand herd or flock let on to new grass will very rapidly identify the highest energy patches and deter all others by marking territory in very basic ways.

Put a trolley of carbohydra­te into the paddock and animals will gravitate quickly to the source of energy.

Despite this basic instinct, there is increasing noise about mixed pastures and varied diets, even to the extent that animals will “selfmedica­te” by picking and choosing herbs in the sward.

But of more importance is that the human construct of “varied diet” is being super-imposed on animals. We’ve turned house-pets into pseudo-children and now we’re embracing farm animals under the same umbrella.

Doing this will result in unintended consequenc­es, such as weight gain, just as it has in humans and pets. It will also increase waste because it is difficult to manage different foods optimally, whether weekly from the supermarke­t or within a grazing rotation.

Mixed species pastures have been investigat­ed in New Zealand since the 1930s.

Sir Bruce Levy, a DSIR Grasslands scientist, reported in the mid-1930s that whatever the number of species sown, simplicity produces the maximum quantity and quality of edible herbage.

This is because a few species can be managed optimally, and the rest die out through inevitable competitio­n.

This decade, research by Dr Al Black and Professor Derrick Moot, forage specialist­s at Lincoln University, has shown that sowing up to three species of different functional groups (grass, legume, herb) provides increased yields and weed suppressio­n.

Any further increase in species number changes the botanical compositio­n but not the total yield and quality of the pasture.

Quality is important in this debate because it affects animal performanc­e and greenhouse gas production. High-quality pasture allows the genetic potential of the animal to be fulfilled for least impact on the environmen­t.

For farm animals managed optimally for intake, health and low environmen­tal impact, the research is clear. Grass, legume and herb is the recipe for high quality and optimal animal performanc­e.

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