Livestock Pollution and Public Health

California officials identify agriculture, including cows, as the major source of nitrate pollution in more than
100,000 square miles of polluted groundwater.
In Oklahoma, nitrates from Seaboard Farms' hog operations contaminated drinking water wells, prompting the U.
S. Environmental Protection Agency to issue an emergency order in June 2001 requiring the company to provide
safe drinking water to area residents.
In 1996 the Centers for Disease Control established a link between spontaneous abortions and high nitrate levels
in Indiana drinking water wells located close to feedlots.
High levels of nitrates in drinking water also increase the risk of methemoglobinemia, or "blue-baby syndrome,"
which can kill infants.
Animal waste contains disease-causing pathogens, such as Salmonella, E. coli, Cryptosporidium, and fecal
coliform, which can be 10 to 100 times more concentrated than in human waste. More than 40 diseases can be
transferred to humans through manure.
In May 2000, 1,300 cases of gastroenteritis were reported and six people died as the result of E. coli
contaminating drinking water in Walkerton, Ontario. Health authorities determined that the most likely source was
cattle manure runoff.
Manure from dairy cows is thought to have contributed to the disastrous Cryptosporidium contamination of
Milwaukee's drinking water in 1993, which killed more than 100 people, made 400,000 sick and resulted in $37
million in lost wages and productivity.
In this country, roughly 24 million pounds of antibiotics -- about 70 percent of the nation's antibiotics use in total --
are added to animal feed every year to speed livestock growth. This widespread use of antibiotics on animals
contributes to the rise of resistant bacteria, making it harder to treat human illnesses.
Large hog farms emit hydrogen sulfide, a gas that most often causes flu-like symptoms in humans, but at high
concentrations can lead to brain damage. In 1998, the National Institute of Health reported that 19 people died as
a result of hydrogen sulfide emissions from manure pits.
Livestock pollution and water pollution
Huge open-air waste lagoons, often as big as several football fields, are prone to leaks and spills. In 1995 an
eight-acre hog-waste lagoon in North Carolina burst, spilling 25 million gallons of manure into the New River. The
spill killed about 10 million fish and closed 364,000 acres of coastal wetlands to shellfishing.
From 1995 to 1998, 1,000 spills or pollution incidents occurred at livestock feedlots in 10 states and 200 manure-
related fish kills resulted in the death of 13 million fish.
When Hurricane Floyd hit North Carolina in 1999, at least five manure lagoons burst and approximately 47
lagoons were completely flooded.
Runoff of chicken and hog waste from factory farms in Maryland and North Carolina is believed to have
contributed to outbreaks of Pfiesteria piscicida, killing millions of fish and causing skin irritation, short-term
memory loss and other cognitive problems in local people.
Nutrients in animal waste cause algal blooms, which use up oxygen in the water, contributing to a "dead zone" in
the Gulf of Mexico where there's not enough oxygen to support aquatic life. The dead zone fluctuates in size each
year, extending over 5,800 square miles during the summer of 2004 and stretching over 7,700 square miles
during the summer of 1999.
Ammonia, a toxic form of nitrogen released in gas form during waste disposal, can be carried more than 300 miles
through the air before being dumped back onto the ground or into the water, where it causes algal blooms and
fish kills.
The growth of factory farms
During the past 15 years the number of hog farms in the United States dropped from 600,000 to 157,000, yet the
number of hogs remains almost the same.
In 1999, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported that 2 percent of the hog farms in the country produce over
46 percent of the total number of hogs.
Ten large companies produce more than 90 percent of the nation's poultry.
There are approximately 450 CAFOs operating in Missouri. These operations generate a large amount of
manure and have the potential to seriously impact our water resources.