Negative Effects Of Manure On The Environment

You may be wondering why are manure lagoons dangerous? Though part of the natural cycle of life on pasture, there are many negative effects of manure on the environment when there is too much of it.

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by AdobeStock/Budimir Jevtic

You may be wondering why are manure lagoons dangerous? Though part of the natural cycle of life on pasture, there are many negative effects of manure on the environment when there is too much of it.

What exactly is in our food? In The Meaty Truth (Skyhorse Publishing, 2014), authors Shushana Castle and Amy-Lee Goodman examine the American population’s food supply, going into detail about how the current food supply is contaminated with toxins, antibiotics, untested growth hormones, ammonia and animal manure. This excerpt, which discusses the lack of awareness surrounding waste and manure spills at livestock feed lots, is from Chapter 2, “America the Beautiful: From Cesspool to Shining Cesspool.”

The Environmental Damage Caused by Livestock Waste and Manure Spills

In 2010, the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico made the front pages of newspapers for weeks, as images of the disaster took over the nightly news. The CEO of BP was put under tremendous scrutiny for the accident that sent 4.9 million gallons of oil into the Gulf. There was a public outcry, and hundreds of groups helped to clean up the spill. The BP oil spill was larger than the infamous 1989 Exxon Valdez spill, which impacted 1,300 miles of ocean and killed an astounding 250,000 birds. Why are we talking about oil spills?

While oil spills receive nationwide coverage and public outcry, consistent lagoon spills occur all the time with zero nationwide and limited, if any, local coverage. Some of the lagoon spills are comparable to, if not bigger than, the Exxon Valdez spill. For instance, in 1995 a 120,000 square-foot lagoon at Oceanview Farms in North Carolina burst, sending twenty-five million gallons of feces and wastewater into the New River. The spill killed at least ten million fish and polluted 350,000 coastal acres of shellfish habitat. Dead fish began lining the banks of the river within two hours of the spill. The manure sludge was so dense it took two months for the sludge to make the sixteen-mile stretch down the New River to the ocean.

  • Updated on Jul 17, 2023
  • Originally Published on Nov 21, 2014
Tagged with: environmental damage, manure
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