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Buffalo

The water buffalo is endangered in the wild but is increasingly farmed in the UK for meat and dairy products. 

Consumers horrified by the treatment of cows within the dairy industry may ask themselves if the production of buffalo products, such as milk and cheese, is less exploitative.  Farmed buffalo are exploited in the same ways as dairy cows; guidelines for buffalo are no different to those applied to ordinary dairy herds.  Water buffalo undergo a range of mutilations and restrictions during their lifetime.   As with dairy cows, slaughter at the end of their productive lives is inevitable.

In the wild water buffalo spend much of their day submerged in the muddy tropical and subtropical forests of Asia to which they adapted.  A far cry from the temperate fields and winter housing regimes of UK buffalo farms.

Buffalo Milk

As with all other mammals, a water buffalo secretes milk from her mammary glands to nourish her young calf until weaned.  Before a water buffalo can produce milk, in common with other species of mammal, she must first become pregnant and give birth.  Once born the calf is removed so that the mother’s milk can be taken for human consumption as milk or cheese etc.  Left to their own devices water buffalo would normally produce a calf every two years1 but in dairy farming they are bred every year.2 The mother water buffalo then enters a constant cycle of pregnancy, lactation and forced separation from her young.  She will be slaughtered when her milk yield drops.

Water buffalo are milked like dairy cows in the same parlours. Livestock farmers acknowledge that water buffalos are more difficult to parlor train than dairy cows,3  as water buffalos are regarded as more intelligent than dairy cows4 this suggests that being unnaturally milked (rather than suckled by her calf) could be stressful.

Breeding

Water Buffalos have more difficulty conceiving by artificial insemination (AI) compared to standard dairy cows so are usually mated naturally.  However research is being undertaken to develop breeding programs for water buffalos that will “improve productivity” and reduce the “interval between generations5 (reduce the age that the mother is able to give birth).  As with dairy cows the water buffalo will be mated or inseminated again months after giving birth to her calf.

Overworked

The double burden of pregnancy and lactation imposes enormous stress on the body.  Dairy industries themselves acknowledge that “producing milk is one of the most energy demanding biological processes” and that “weight loss is common in high producing animals during the first month of lactation because they can not consume a sufficient amount of energy.6 To keep pace the water buffalo’s food is supplemented with concentrated feeds.

Winter Housing

Like dairy cows, water buffalo are annually confined to winter quarters; this means that for up to six months the herd is housed in sheds.

Forced Separation

Left to their own devices calves would naturally suckle from their mothers for six to twelve months.  On buffalo farms calves are taken from their mothers within days so that the mother’s milk can be bottled for humans instead.

The fate of the calf depends on what sex the calf is. Female calves are used for milk production while male buffalo calves will be raised for meat.

Castration

Rules governing water buffalo are the same as those governing cattle so methods of castration are the same.  There are currently three different ways in which a water buffalo calf may be castrated.  A common method is the elastrator method which involves placing a rubber ring over the scrotum within a week of birth and leaving it in place at the base.  The elastrator will cause the scrotum and testes to shrink, wither and drop off after about two weeks. This method is cheap but causes a great deal of pain to the animal.

“Bloodless castration” involves the use of a Burdizzo which is essentially a large pair of pincers with blunt ends. This is clamped around the spermatic cord of each testicle in turn, crushing it and the blood vessels at the base of the scrotum.  Despite the obvious pain that this method causes calves less than two months of age may be castrated in this way without the use of any pain relief.7

During surgical castration the bottom of the scrotum is cut open and each testicle is pulled out, the wound is left open in order to drain.  Only a veterinary surgeon can legally castrate a calf.8

The Farm Animal Welfare Council (FAWC) describes castration as “an undesirable mutilation which should be avoided if at all possible” and thatirrespective of the age of the calf, all three methods of castration appear to cause acute pain9

Dairy Farming & Meat Production – the Link

When the water buffalo’s milk levels drops she is sent for slaughter and is quickly replaced with a more profitable animal.  The belief that animals are not killed in the production of milk for human consumption is a myth.

Transportation & Slaughter

The business of killing farm animals has become concentrated into fewer and larger slaughterhouses.  This means that animals are transported over longer distances on their final journey.  At the slaughterhouse the water buffalo are held in a stunning pen where they are stunned using a captive bolt pistol.  They are then shackled by the leg, and their throats slit.  After the blood has drained away the animals’ body is dismembered.

Organic and “humane” Dairy Farming

The basic principles of modern dairying are also found in organic milk production: continual pregnancies, forced separation and slaughter.

Plant Milks

Nutritious plant based milks are free from saturated fat and are usually lower in total fat than Buffalo or cows milk.  Buffalo and cows milk contain calcium but so do vegan foods such as green leafy vegetables, fortified soya milks and evan orange juice.  Today there is not only soya milk but oat milk, rice milk, quinoa milk, almond milk, hazelnut milk and hemp milk. 

References

[1] National Geographic.  Water Buffalo. http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/water-buffalo.html (accessed 09/01/2009).

[2] Buffalo Milk.  Husbandry & Management. http://www.buffalomilk.co.uk/id26.htm (accessed 09/01/2009).

[3] Buffalo Milk.  Milk Production. http://www.buffalomilk.co.uk/id26.htm (accessed 09/01/2009).

[4] RIRDC (1997) A handbook for Farmers and Investors.  Rural Industries Research & Development Corporation.  http://www.rirdc.gov.au/pub/handbook/waterbuff.html (accessed 12/01/2009).

[5] DeLaval.  Reproduction and Breeding.

http://www.delaval.com/Dairy_Knowledge/EfficientBuffalo/Reproduction-and-breeding.htm (accessed 12/01/2009).

[6] Ibid.

[7] Defra (2003) Code of Recommendations for the Welfare of Cattle. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, London, p. 2

[8] Ibid

[9] FAWC (1997) Report on the Welfare of Dairy Cattle.  Farm Animal Welfare Council.  Surbiton,  Surrey.

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