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This factsheet was completed by People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) . Please direct any questions or
comments to PETA directly at 757-622-7382 or info@peta.org.
Pigs: Smart Animals at the Mercy of the Pork Industry
Pigs “have the cognitive ability to be quite sophisticated. Even more so than
dogs and certainly [more so than] three-year-olds,” says Dr. Donald Broom,
Cambridge University professor and former scientific advisor to the Council of
Europe.(1) Pigs can play video games, and when offered a choice, they have
indicated environmental temperature preferences.(2)
These facts are not surprising to anyone who has spent time around these
social, playful animals. Pigs, who have a great sense of smell and can live into
their teens, are very protective of their young and form bonds with other pigs.
Contrary to popular belief, pigs are clean animals, but they do not have sweat
glands, so they take to the mud to stay cool and ward off flies.(3,4)
Factory Farming Causes Suffering
Only pigs in movies spend their lives running across sprawling pastures and
relaxing in the sun. On any given day in the United States, there are
approximately 60 million pigs living on factory farms, and about 100 million are
killed for food every year.(5,6) Factory-farming conditions are no better in
Canada, which annually exports more than 6 million live pigs to the U.S. for
slaughter.(7) Managers of Canada’s largest pig exporter faced cruelty charges
after 10,000 dead and dying pigs were found on the company’s farms.
Investigators found dead pigs stacked behind barns and dead piglets in manure
tanks, and all the live pigs “were in some form of distress.”(8)
Mother pigs (sows), who account for about 6 million of the pigs in the U.S.,
spend most of their lives in individual “gestation” crates, which are about 7
feet long and 2 feet wide—too small for them even to turn around.(9) After
giving birth to piglets, sows are moved to “farrowing” crates, which are wide
enough for them to lie down and nurse their babies but still not large enough
for them to turn around or build nests for their young.(10)
Piglets are taken from their mothers when they are as young as 10 days old.
Once her piglets are gone, each sow is impregnated again, and the cycle
continues for three or four years before she is slaughtered.(11,12) This
intensive confinement produces stress- and boredom-related behaviors, such as
chewing on cage bars or obsessively pressing on water bottles.(13,14)
After they are taken from their mothers, piglets are packed into pens until
they are separated to be raised for breeding or meat.(15) Because they, too, are
overcrowded and prone to stress-related behaviors (such as cannibalism and
tail-biting), farmers chop off the piglets’ tails and use pliers to break off
the ends of their teeth—with no anesthetics.(16) For identification purposes,
farmers also rip chunks out of the young animals’ ears.(17)
Transportation and Slaughter
Farms all over North America ship piglets (called “feeder pigs”) to Corn Belt
states such as Illinois and Indiana for “growing” and “finishing.” The United
States Department of Agriculture (USDA) reported that fewer than 30 percent of
weaned piglets spend their entire lives on the same farm.(18)
During transport on trucks, piglets weighing up to 100 pounds are given no
more than 2.4 square feet of space, and farmers are warned that the piglets
“probably will get sick within a few days after arrival.”(19) One study
confirmed that vibrations, like those made by a moving truck, are “very
aversive” to pigs. When pigs “were trained to press a switch panel to stop for
30 seconds vibration and noise in a transport simulator … the animals worked
very hard to get the 30 seconds of rest.”(20)
Once pigs reach “market weight” (about 250 to 270 pounds), the industry
refers to them as “hogs,” and they are sent to be slaughtered. The animals are
shipped from all over the U.S. and Canada to slaughterhouses, which are mostly
in the Midwest. There are no laws to regulate the duration of transport,
frequency of rest, or provisions of food and water for the animals.(21,22) Pigs
tend to resist getting into the trailers, which can be made from converted
school buses or multidecked trucks with steep ramps, so workers use electric
prods to move them along. There is no federal law to regulate the voltage or
usage of electric prods on pigs, and a study showed that when the electric prods
were used, pigs “vocalized, lost their balance and tr[ied] to jump out of the
loading area” and that their “[h]eart rate and body temperature was
significantly higher … when compared to pigs loaded using a hurdle [movable
chute].”(23) A former pig transporter told PETA that pigs are “packed in so
tight, their guts actually pop out their butts—a little softball of guts
actually comes out.”(24) According to industry reports, more than 100,000 pigs
die on the way to slaughter each year, and more than 400,000 are crippled from
the journey by the time they arrive at the slaughterhouse.(25) A Michigan State
University study concluded that the number of pigs who died during
transportation increased 46.7 percent over a five-year period and that the
increase was attributable to “[r]ough handling and incorrect management at the
time of loading and transportation.”(26)
A typical slaughterhouse kills about 1,000 hogs every hour.(27) The sheer
number of animals killed makes it impossible for them to be given humane,
painless deaths. Because of improper stunning, many hogs are alive when they
reach the scalding water bath, which is intended to soften their skin and remove
their hair.(28) The USDA documented 14 humane-slaughter violations at one
processing plant, where inspectors found hogs who “were walking and squealing
after being stunned [with a stun gun] as many as four times.”(29) An industry
report explains that “continuous pig squealing is a sign of … rough handling and
excessive use of electric prods.” The report found that the pigs at one
federally inspected slaughter plant squealed 100 percent of the time “because
electric prods were used to force pigs to jump on top of each other.”(30) A PETA
investigation found that workers at an Oklahoma farm were killing pigs by
slamming the animals’ heads against the floor and beating them with a
hammer.(31)
The Unhealthy “Other White Meat”
The consumption of pork and other animal products has been linked to cancers
of the mouth, throat, colon, and stomach.(32,33,34) A study of more than 90,000
women concluded that “frequent consumption of bacon, hot dogs, and sausage was …
associated with an increased risk of diabetes.”(35) And yet, those very pork
products are on the daily menu for 25 percent of kids between the ages of 19
months and 2 years.(36) According to another study, the children of pregnant
women who consume cured meats on a daily basis run a “substantial risk of
[growing a] paediatric brain tumour.”(37)
Every year in the United States, food poisoning sickens up to 76 million
people and kills 5,000.(38) Pork products are known carriers of foodborne
pathogens: One study found that more than 50 percent of the tested samples of
ham were contaminated with staphylococcus, and another study determined that
“traditional salting, drying and smoking of raw pork meat was not
antimicrobiologically effective” against Salmonella typhimurium.(39)
Because crowding creates an atmosphere that encourages disease, pigs on
factory farms are fed and sprayed with huge amounts of pesticides and
antibiotics, which remain in their bodies and are passed on to the people who
eat them, creating serious human health hazards. Pigs and other factory-farmed
animals are fed 20 million pounds of antibiotics a year, and scientists believe
that meat-eaters’ involuntary consumption of these drugs is giving rise to
strains of bacteria that are resistant to treatment.(40) Both the World Health
Organization and the American Medical Association have recommended that factory
farms stop using antibiotics, but the pig industry, in particular, is
resistant.(41,42) One member of the National Pork Board complained, “If we take
growth promoters out, then we’re going to have a wider range of weights in the
pigs going to market. And the packer won’t pay top dollar ...”(43)
Environmental Hazards and Costs
Animals on factory farms produce approximately 500 million tons of manure
each day.(44) One hog farm with 50,000 animals can produce more waste than the
entire city of Los Angeles.(45) Much of this waste ends up in giant pits in the
ground or on crops, but either way, it pollutes the air and groundwater. The
Environmental Protection Agency says that agricultural runoff is the number one
source of pollution in our waterways.(46) A Missouri-based hog farm had to pay a
$1 million fine for illegally dumping waste, which caused the contamination of a
nearby river and the deaths of more than 50,000 fish.(47) Smithfield Foods, the
largest pork producer on the East Coast, was fined $12.6 million for polluting
the Pagan River with phosphorous-contaminated wastewater from its slaughter
plant.(48)
Along with other animals farmed for meat, pigs are the primary consumers of
half the water in the U.S.49 Eighty percent of agricultural land in the U.S. is
used to grow food to meet the needs of pigs and other factory-farmed
animals.(50) In the “finishing” phase alone, during which pigs grow from 100 to
240 pounds, each hog consumes more than 500 pounds of grain, corn, and soybeans,
which means that across the U.S., pigs and hogs eat tens of millions of tons of
feed every year.(51)
What You Can Do
Stop factory-farming abuses by supporting legislation that abolishes
intensive-confinement systems. Florida voters banned the use of gestation
crates, as did the United Kingdom.(52, 53)
Stop buying meat, milk, and eggs. Vegetarianism and veganism mean eating for
life—yours and the animals’. Call 1-888-VEG-FOOD or visit GoVeg.com to get your
free vegetarian starter kit.
References
1)“New Slant on Chump Chops,” Cambridge Daily News, 29 Mar. 2002 .
2)“The Millennium List,” The Times (London), 9 Jan. 2000.
3)M.K. Holder, “Smart Puzzle #3 Pig,” Center for the Integrative Study of
Animal Behaviors, Indiana University, 1999.
4)Meg Meier, “Oink, Moo, Quack,” Star Tribune, 27 Aug. 2002.
5)USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service, “USDA Quarterly Pigs and
Hogs Report: September 2003,” The PigSite.com, 20 Nov. 2003.
6)Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, “Pigmeat,
Slaughtered/Production Animals (Head) 2002,” 10 Jun. 2003.
7)United States Department of Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service,
“Canadian Pork Industry Overview, September 2003,” The PigSite.com, Sep. 2003.
8)Kelly Pedro, “Pigs Found Dead, Dying. Seven Men Have Been Charged Over
the Grim Discovery Involving 10,000 Animals,” The London Free Press,
15 Sep. 2003.
9)Marc Kaufman, “In Pig Farming, Growing Concern,” The Washington Post,
18 Jun. 2001.
10)Kaufman.
11)A.J. Zanella and O. Duran, “Pig Welfare During Loading and
Transportation: A North American Perspective,” I Conferencia Virtual
Internacional Sobre Qualidade de Carne Suina, via Internet, 16 Nov. 2000.
12)Kaufman.
13)Zanella and Duran.
14)Kaufman.
15)William G. Luce et al., “Managing the Sow and Litter,” Oklahoma
Cooperative Extension Service, Mar. 1995.
16)Luce.
17)L. Neil Burcham, “Identify Pigs by Ear Notching,” Cooperative Extension
Service, New Mexico State University, Nov. 1997.
18)Dennis A. Shields and Kenneth H. Mathews Jr., “Interstate Livestock
Movements,” United States Department of Agriculture, Jun. 2003.
19)John C. Rea and George W. Jesse, “Managing Purchased Feeder Pigs,”
Department of Animal Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, 1 Oct. 1993.
20)Zanella and Duran.
21)Shields and Mathews Jr.
22)Zanella and Duran.
23)Zanella and Duran.
24)Carla Bennett, “The Joy and Sorrow of Pigs,” Animal Times, Fall
1996.
25)Joe Vansickle, “Quality Assurance Program Launched,” National Hog
Farmer, 15 Feb. 2002.
26)Zanella and Duran.
27)Lance Gay, “Faulty Practices Result in Inhumane Slaughterhouses,”
Scripps Howard News Service, Feb. 2001.
28)Joby Warrick, “‘They Die Piece by Piece’; In Overtaxed Plants, Humane
Treatment of Cattle Is Often a Battle Lost,” The Washington Post, 10
Apr. 2001.
29)Warrick.
30)Temple Grandin, “2001 Restaurant Audits of Stunning and Handling in
Federally Inspected Beef and Pork Slaughter Plants,” 2002 Meat Institute
Animal Handling and Stunning Conference, Colorado State University: Department
of Animal Sciences, 2002.
31)Marc Kaufman, “Ex-Pig Farm Manager Charged With Cruelty,” The
Washington Post, 9 Sep. 2001.
32)F. Levi et al., “Food Groups and Risk of Oral and Pharyngeal
Cancer,” International Journal of Cancer, 77 (1998): 705-9.
33)F. Levi et al., “Food Groups and Colorectal Cancer Risk,”
British Journal of Cancer, 79 (1999): 1283-7.
34)P.A. van den Brandt et al., “Salt Intake, Cured Meat
Consumption, Refrigerator Use and Stomach Cancer Incidence: A Prospective
Cohort Study (Netherlands),” Cancer Causes and Control, 14 (2003):
427-38.
35)M.B. Schulze et al., “Processed Meat Intake and Incidence of
Type 2 Diabetes in Younger and Middle-Aged Women,” Diabetologia, 24
Oct. 2003.
36)T.A. Badger, “Infants, Toddlers Developing Bad Eating Habits, Study
Finds,” Associated Press, 26 Oct. 2003.
37)J.M. Pogoda, “Maternal Cured Meat Consumption During Pregnancy and Risk
of Paediatric Brain Tumour in Offspring: Potentially Harmful Levels of
Intake,” Public Health Nutrition, 2 (2001): 1303-5.
38)Paul S. Mead et al., “Food-Related Illness and Death in the
United States,” Emerging Infectious Diseases, 5.5 (1999): 607-625.
39)P.L. Mertens, “An Epidemic of Salmonella Typhimurium Associated With
Traditional Salted, Smoked, and Dried Ham,” Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd,
143 (1999): 1046-9.
40)Jeff Donn, “Contaminated Meat Spurs Concern. Study Finds 1 in 5 Market
Samples Contained Drug-Resistant Bacteria,” Associated Press, 18 Oct. 2001.
41)Marc Kaufman, “WHO Urges End to Use of Antibiotics for Animal Growth,”
The Washington Post, 13 Aug. 2003.
42)“Groups Applaud AMA Action on Antibiotics in Agriculture, Antibiotic
Resistance,” U.S. Newswire, 20 Jun. 2001.
43)Dana Hedgpeth, “Hog Producers Dispute WHO on Antibiotics,” The
Washington Post, 16 Aug. 2003.
44)John Heilprin, “Bush Issues Rule for Factory-Style Farms,” Associated
Press, 16 Dec. 2002.
45)Senator Tom Harkin, “Animal Waste Pollution in America: An Emerging
National Problem,” United States Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition,
and Forestry, Dec. 1997.
46)Heilprin.
47)“Cargill Fined $1 Million for Dumping Hog Waste in River,” Associated
Press, 20 Feb. 2002.
48)Bob Piazza and Rex Springston, “Smithfield Is Fined $12.6 Million,”
Richmond Times-Dispatch, 9 Aug. 1997.
49)Bill McKibben, “Taking the Pulse of the Planet,” Audubon, Nov.
1999.
50)Marlow Vesterby and Kenneth S. Krupa, “Major Uses of Land in the United
States, 1997,” Statistical Bulletin No. 973. U.S. Department of Agriculture,
1997.
51)Dr. John Carlson, “Evaluation of Corn Processing By-Products in Swine
Diets,” Western Illinois University, 3 Apr. 1996.
52)Alicia Caldewell and Anita Kumar, “Smoking Limited, Hog Crates
Enlarged,” St. Petersburg Times, 26 Nov. 2002.
53)John J. McGlone, “Current Status of Housing and Penning Systems for
Sows,” Pork Industry Institute, Texas Tech University, May 2002.
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