industrial animals and environmental impact ansc 3
TRANSCRIPT
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
ANSC 3
Unit Map: Follow Along in your packet
WHAT ARE YOU LEARNING?
AS.02.03: Identify technological advances in animal agriscience.
AS.03: Identify breeds of economically important animal species.
AS.03.02: Recognize breed improvements and industry standards.
Know Understand Do!Know
• Definition of industrial animal
• Use of industrial animals
• Environmental impacts of intensive farming
Understand Types of
industrial animals
Processing procedures and regulations
Relationships between environment and farming processes
Do Outline general
care of industrial animals
Describe slaughter regulations
Design regulatory processes for industrial farms incorporating environmental protection
Key Learning: Industrial Farming and the Environmental Impact
• Unit EQ: How can consumers and farmers practice environmental stewardship?
Concept : Environmental Impacts
Lesson EQ:
What impact does industrial farming have on the planet?
Vocab
Pollution, CAFO
Concept : Products and Processing
Lesson EQ: What role do industrial animals play in society?
VocabHACCP, OSHA
Concept : Industrial Animals
Lesson EQ:How are industrial animals defined?
VocabIndustrial Animal
Contents1. Intro to Industrial Animals1. Intro to Industrial Animals
2.1Processing and Safety2.1Processing and Safety
3. Environmental Impact 3. Environmental Impact
2. Products and Processing2. Products and Processing
1. 1 Cattle (Beef and Dairy)1. 1 Cattle (Beef and Dairy)
1. 2 Swine1. 2 Swine
1. 3 Poultry 1. 3 Poultry
2.2 Products and Packaging2.2 Products and Packaging
2.3 Safety at home , Avoiding health risks2.3 Safety at home , Avoiding health risks
3.1 Cause 3.2 Effect 3.3 What’s being done?3.1 Cause 3.2 Effect 3.3 What’s being done?
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
1. Intro to Industrial Animals1. Intro to Industrial Animals
1. 1 Cattle (Beef and Dairy)1. 1 Cattle (Beef and Dairy)
Warm Up
• Which is Which?
Industrial Animal Defined
• Any animal produced on a mass scale used for food, or food products.
• Typically raised on a farm setting– Examples:• Cattle• Swine• Poultry
Cattle
BEEF• Reared for their meat• Bi-products and solid
muscle cuts utilized
DAIRY• Natural bi products used to
make food for human consumption
• Normally go into hamburger meat once finished producing
Beef Cattle Breeds
• Typical Beef Cattle Breeds– Black Angus– Charolais– Hereford– Limousin – Simmental
Beef Cattle Basic Requirements• Care:– Vaccines and antibiotics– Castration and Spaying (Females)
• Determines meat quality and grade– A.I. and selective breeding– Polling / Dehorning
• Safety of handlers and animal• Feed (depends on stage of life)– Forages– Pasture– Concentrated High Protein Grains
• Housing– Fields, walk in stalls, feed lots
Beef Cattle Common Diseases
• EBA• Trichomonosis• Pink eye
Major Areas of Production in US
Activity Break
• Beef Cattle Packet with Questions
• Please work in GROUPS to answer the questions on the attached worksheet
• EACH GROUP MEMBER must produce their own work and turn it into the bin once finished.
DAIRY Cattle Common Breeds
• Holstien• Guernsey• Brown Swiss• Jersey• Ayrshire
Dairy Cattle Care Requirements• Care:– Vaccines and antibiotics– A.I. and selective breeding– Polling / Dehorning
• Safety of handlers and animal
• Feed (depends on stage of life)– Forages– Pasture– Concentrated High Protein Grains
• Housing– Fields, walk in stalls
Dairy Cattle Common Diseases
• Dystocia– Difficulty calving
• Prolapsed Uterus– Cow has pushed uterus outside body- “inside
out”
• Milk Fever– Hypocalcemia- low calcium in blood
Top Dairy Production States
Review Activity Dairy vs. Beef• Make a Ven Diagram• Compare and Contrast– Care aspects– Health problems– Top producing states
• Answer the following:– Why are care aspects the same,
but health concerns different?– What geographical features or
placement of the dairy states makes them “Good” for dairy but not for Beef? And Vice Versa? Why is a beef state not a dairy state?
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
1. Intro to Industrial Animals1. Intro to Industrial Animals
1. 2 Swine1. 2 Swine
Swine Breeds
Dark Breeds• used for their production
abilities such as meatiness, leanness, durability, growth rate, and feed efficiency.
White Breeds• used for their reproductive
abilities such as mothering ability, litter size, and milking ability.
Top BreedsDark Breeds• Berkshire• Duroc• Hampshire• Poland China• Spot
White Breeds
• Chester White• Landrace• Yorkshire
Swine Care Requirements• Care– Pigs over heat easily – Vaccines, Dewormed, antibiotics
• Feed– Concentrated grain– “Slop” on home farms
• Housing– Wallows for cooling– Must be able to lie down– Farrowing crates
Common Swine Diseases• Atrophic Rhinitis– Caused by Bordetella bronchiseptica, Destroys the nasal
turbinates, Significantly affects growth rate and feed efficiency
• E. Coli scours– Highly contagious disease, Mortality may be high, effect
piglets
• Leptospirosis– Causes both arthritis and pneumonia in growing-
finishing pigs , Prevented by vaccination every 6 months
Hog Farm Density in US
Activity Break
• Farrowing Crate Reading Parts one and two– Please answer the questions about Farrowing
Crates
• Farrowing Crate research part three– In groups, please research the questions on the
second half of your paper.
Review Activity • Make a Web!• Use each vocabulary
word• Make connections
between words with lines
• On the lines, write a one sentence explanation of the relationship
• Vocab!• Farrowing, Crate,
Nest Box, Sow, Piglet, bedding, Overheat, Manure, Floor, Suckle
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
1. Intro to Industrial Animals1. Intro to Industrial Animals
1. 3 Poultry 1. 3 Poultry
Warm Up
• How does this Become this?
Top Poultry Breeds• Broiler: White Plymouth
Rock• Rhode Island Red: Dual
Purpose• Single Comb White
Leghorn: Table Egg Laying• Barred Plymouth Rock:
Meat• Aracuana: Dual Purpose
Common Care Practices Poultry• Care– Vaccinations – Debeaking– Spur Trimming and Wing Clipping
• Food– Grain based (corn and soybean)– High Energy
• Housing– Temperature Controlled– Automated– Square foot per chicken
Common Poultry Diseases
• Newcastle’s Disaease– Vaccinated in ovo
• Merek’s Disease– Vaccinated in ovo
• Avian Influenza• Infectious Bronchitis – Vaccinated via eye drops and body sprays
• Salmonella – Competitive exclusion (remember Dr. X!?)
Top Poultry Production States
Activity Break
• CDC Overview Article with Questions• Research the latest Avian Influenza Outbreak– Who was effected? Did anyone die? How many??
Where did this happen? Where did contact occur? Why? How?
• Extension– Why is this a concern? What seems to be the
fear?
Bring it all together
• Grab a US map• Make a key for each animal discussed and items
below– Beef: orange– Dairy: purple– Poultry: yellow– Swine: red
• Color their production states• Mountain Range Rivers/Water Deltas
Map of US Waterways
On the BACK of your Map• Fill in the blanks• ________________ are mass produced in the state
of ______________. The __________ waterway runs through this state and out to the ____________ ocean.
• Make a 5 sentence prediction about what possible threats to animals (being produced), humans, and the environment are present along the waterway mentioned above. Include the state it is in, any states it passes through on the way to the ocean, and the area where it empties into the ocean.
Library Project Research Summary
• What is Agriculture Pollution and Eutrification?• What is the difference between POINT and NON
point pollution (use your definition for context clues)
• EXPLAIN– 3 ways Industrial Farming plays a roll in pollution– 2 examples of “problems” from your homework (where
and what happened?)– 1 reason this is a MAJOR concern for FARMERS, FOOD
PRODUCERS, and CONSUMERS
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
2. Products and Processing 2. Products and Processing
2. 1 Processing Procedures 2. 1 Processing Procedures
Warm Up
• What stages go into making this?
Slaughter Processes• Three Stages:– Preslaughter handling, stunning, slaughter
• Humane Slaughter Act: required throughout processing
Preslaughter Handling • Major Concern– Especially in pork
• Increased stress releases hormones and changes meat quality
• Stress can be reduced by:– Not mixing groups of animals– Adequate ventilation – No overcrowding – No food 24-48 hours prior. Only
water !
Stunning
• Restrained in a chute single file• Three methods– Electrical• Electricity passes through the brain
– Mechanical• Pistol
– Gasing • Carbon Dioxide
Slaughter
• Normally suspended by hind leg • Bled out (exsanguination)– Sever carotid artery and jugular vein.
• Remove intestines:– Evisceration
• Process varies by species
Slaughter: Cattle • Stunned mechanically• Feet removed• Hung by Achilles' tendon • Skinned mechanically – Salted and tanned for later use for leather
• Head removed at the atlas joint • Evisceration (removal of insides)– kidney, pelvic, and heart fat left in grading.
• Cold storage for 24 hours
Slaughter: Swine• Stunned electrically or by gas• Hung by back legs• Exsanguination • Skin left on!– Scalding tank (145 degrees) loosens
scurf (hair etc)– Dehairing machine
• Head removed• Evisceration– Intestines saved for natural casing
Slaughter Poultry
Meat Inspection• Antemortem (BEFORE)– IDs animals not fit for human consumption– 4D animals
• Down, Disabled, Diseased, Dead• Removed and labeled condemned• “Suspect” animals removed
• Postmortem (AFTER)– head, viscera, and carcasses – IDs whole carcasses, individual parts, or organs not
safe for human consumption.
Inspection During Processing
• Previously inspected meat is used in the preparation of processed meat products
• Ingredients are added to processed meats.• Reinspection during processing assures safe
ingredients are used in the manufacture of processed meat products (e.g., sausage and ham).
HSUS
• Humane Society of the United States• Established in 1954, The HSUS seeks a
humane and sustainable world for all animals—a world that will also benefit people.
• Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kok4ADtRM8g
Think about it further• Write a letter to a state official explaining the need for
the HSUS. Cite an investigation and explain why the investigation was needed (in context of human safe food) Finally, write about why the government should be more supportive of the HSUS. What agency should support them and why?– You will need to research the various gov’t agencies (FBI, USDA, FDA, CDC) and
include their missions as supportive evidence • Why do we need the HSUS?• DO we even need them? • Where should their reach end?• What should they be responsible for? • Who should help them ? (FBI? FDA? USDA?)• Why do you think these agencies are remaining partially separated from the HSUS?
Activity Break
• Design a flow chart, cartoon, or other type of manual explaining the slaughtering process in either cattle, swine, or poultry
Finished?
• Chapter book work• Blue Agriscience book Chapter 20– Define your vocabulary– Perform the discussion questions only please.
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
2. Products and Processing 2. Products and Processing
2. 1 Products, Sanitation, and Packaging2. 1 Products, Sanitation, and Packaging
Which takes more steps?
Beef Processing
• Whole sale cuts: Primal cuts– chuck, loin, rib and round
• Retail cuts: what you buy at the store – most expensive usually come from the loin area– chops and steaks such as the T Bone
• Trimming– are made into sausage or ground meat
Cuts of meat
Beef Processing: Grading• Meat in freezer is graded according to USDA
standards– Performed by AMS (Ag Marketing Service)– federal meat grading was established in 1925
• Grades (2 types): certifies class, quality and condition with uniform standards– are determined by the age of the animal amount of fat
intermingled with the muscle– Quality: prediction of the eating quality (palatability) – Yield: indicate expected yield of edible meat
Grade Levels
Quality Grade Levels • prime• choice• select• standard• commercial• utility• cutter• canner
Yield Grade Levels • estimate of the percentage
of boneless, closely trimmed retail cuts that come from the major lean primal cuts
• 1 over 52.3 % lean primal cuts
• 2 50 - 52.3%• 3 47.7-50.0• 4 45.4-47.7%• 5 less than 45.4%
Grading Continued…
Age• maturity of the cartilage and
bones– Cartilage -> bone
• Inspecting rib cage and vertebrae for the degree of bone and cartilage hardening - ossification
• Animals older than about 42 months cannot receive the highest two grades– Young=Tender
Fat• Fat= Marbling
– specks of white in meat– More specks= higher grade
• Prime=highest level of marbling– Skinny animals are cheaper to
grow therefore the meat is cheaper than heavier animals
Safety During Processing
• Major Players– USDA : helps set standards – HACCP processes• A food safety and self-inspection system that highlights
potentially hazardous foods and how they are handled in the food service environment.
Let’s Take A Look
• Analyzing the a Beef HACCP Plan – HACCP 13 pages 29-35 – Read/Write/Trade
• Fill in your graphic organizer• Answer the summary questions rally robin
with a partner
Activity Graphic Organizer and Q’s
• Answer the following after completing your graphic organizer for Beef, Swine, Poultry– What is the most hazardous processing point for all 3 animals?– What is the most common threat? What affect does this have on
Human health? Explain– What is the most common prevention (safety) method and how
does it work? Explain
Animal Processing Point
Potential Hazard
Prevention/ Safety method
EXAMPLE: Beef Skin Removal Biological (E.Coli)
Antimicrobial bath (kills bacteria
WATCH A RIVER OF WASTE
• TAKE GOOD NOTES!!!
River of Waste Video Summary Essay• One: Introduction
– Video based general summary, include definition of CAFO and why they are used• Two: Specifics
– Discuss a specific geographical area in the US that is having a problem. Discuss the problem, its implication on human and environmental health and the source of the problem
• Three: Discuss America’s Report Card– What were the grading areas, What are the sources of the problems
• Four: What are other countries doing? – List 3 specific ideas discussed in the video that other countries are implementing to
prevent the problems faced in the US • Five: Conclusion
– Reflect about the video and your thoughts about the US, other countries, and living in Delaware (include information about animal production in Delaware and possible health risks
• Works Cited Page: APA Style 5 Sources 2 Scholarly (use google scholar to search)
Beef Processing Video
• 40 mins • Discussion to follow
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
2. Products and Processing 2. Products and Processing
2. 1 Products, Sanitation, and Packaging2. 1 Products, Sanitation, and Packaging
HACCP Plans Swine and Poultry• Design a foldable/ graphic organizer
that outlines the following:– Where in the slaughter process hazards
occur?– What type of hazard is present – What is the hazard– How is it monitored/ prevented/
controlled?
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
2. Products and Processing2. Products and Processing
2.2 Products and Packaging2.2 Products and Packaging
FLIP ABLES! • Grab 2 copies of each worksheet. • Cut out the “cuts of meat” on one
worksheet. Leave the other one solid.• Put the CUT paper on top of the regular
paper– On the FLIPS include what cuts of meat come
from that area on the animal– Beef– Swine – Poultry
Cuts of beef (15 minutes)
Cuts of Pork (Swine) (15 mins)
Cuts of Poultry (15 mins)
Packaging in the Meat Dept Fresh: uncured, uncooked, not frozen
a. distribution– good oxygen barrier– good water barrier– sealable– thermoforms (heat shrink) to reduce purge and adjust to size– puncture, tear resistant– EVA/PVDC/EVA – typical
– b. retail• highly oxygen permeable…or impermeable with CO
– good water barrier– sealable– clear, glossy– tamper, handling resistant– PVC typical
Packaging Contin…
• 2. fresh, cooked-packaged after cooked, slicing– good barrier for both oxygen and water --- some may include
aluminum foil and may include oxygen absorbers --- to prevent WOF and rancid flavors
– nylon/PVDC/nylon/EVA typical
“Cook-in” films• good barrier as above• adhesion properties for product surface to prevent cook purge• Surlyn ionomers typical
Packaging Contin…
• 3. fresh, frozen (i.e. poultry)– good oxygen barrier, medium water barrier at freezer temperature– shrinkable (prevent frost-recrystallization)– PE is typical
• 4. cured, cooked– good barrier to oxygen and water– sealable and resealable – thermoformable– puncture, tear, tamper resistant– clear, glossy– nylon/PVDC/PE typical
What are the trends?
• Review packaging methods discussion
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
2. Products and Processing2. Products and Processing
2.3 Safety at Home, Avoiding Health Risks2.3 Safety at Home, Avoiding Health Risks
Dr. X Modules Recap • After viewing the Dr. X Video in its entirety,
please answer the following;– What is a pathogen and why are they so dangerous?– Where do most “problems” arise within the home?– Give 4 ways to help prevent the spread of disease to
humans from animal products– Explain how the nature of Bacteria / Virus help us to
“beat” them. Now contrast how the same characteristic can cause us to fail leading to epidemic illness
Industrial Animals and Environmental Impact
3. Environmental Impact 3. Environmental Impact
Stage One: Introduction to the ProblemStage One: Introduction to the Problem
Step One : Intro and Prologue• Break into 6 groups of 3• Half of groups take a prologue and half of groups take an
introduction • EACH GROUP OF 3 ANSWER THE FOLLOWING
– What is the book about?– Who are the main characters?– What are the problems discussed?– How are the main characters connected to the problems? – Where are the problems occurring?– Why are the problems so serious?– For each problem predict a solution that might be proposed later in
the reading.
Group Readings• Get into 3 groups– Each will receive a reading excerpt from Animal Factory
• (grab a book for extra reading supplies from the shelf)
– Please read together by paragraphs then switch reading ROUND ROBIN• WHILE YOU READ be prepared to answer the following to
share with the class– What is your animal? Where does this story take place? Who are the
main characters and what role are they playing your story? Who seems to be the “bad guy” or the problem starter? What is the main PROBLEM? Is there any hints about what they must do to change their situation?
Where is the Problem?
• After reading, please use the internet or other sources as a group to answer the following– Where is the “problem” – What geographical features make this a more
serious issue?– What is the impact the problem is having on the
environment?– Is this still (currently) an issue in that area?
Further Research
• Using the internet as a group find the following:– What group is utilized to help solve the issue from your
reading? • Provide mission statement / purpose and be ready to show us
their website in class
– Why do they feel they needed to organize to help solve the issue?
– What was a major break through for your organization concerning combating the problem from your reading?
– What is the current status, or current project your organization is working on?
Unit Review • HACCP, CAFO, USDA, FDA, EPA• What are top producing states for beef, swine, and poultry?• What are common care practices for ALL industrial animals?• List the stages of processing for cattle, swine, poultry• List 3 products made from each animal discussed in class• What are health hazards concerning food AT HOME? How do we
combat these in our homes?• Generally explain the categories of products made and how they
are packaged• Explain the 3 issues discussed in Animal Factory
– Where were they? What animals? What was the problems? Why were these “problems”?