#cattle
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Mama cow with her baby :3
#animal#cute cows#cows#animals#farm animals#farmcore#farm#countryside#rural life#rural#grass#Mama cow#baby cows#cow#cottagecore#cattle#bovine#wholesome#sweet#i love them#this is so cute omg#this is so cuteeee#this is so cute actually#i love it#i love this#i love this so much#i love it so much#this is perfect#animal instincts#family
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White cows in Guadalupe, Mexico
(Photos taken by me on fujifilm x-t30)
#cows#cow#cattle#domestic cattle#domestic cows#farm#farm animals#Mexico#latin america#Guadalupe#Zacatecas#cacti#cactus#desert#photography#nature photography#animals#animal photography#outdoors#travel#travel photography#outdoor photography
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So, here's the thing: ranching in the United States was developed in part by exterminating any large animals that could pose a threat to cattle and other livestock, whether through predation or competition for food. That includes wolves, bears, cougars, bison, etc. While it's likely there was someone along the line who tried to coexist with these wild animals while raising livestock, the prevailing solution was to kill "nuisance" species, whether by shooting, trapping, or poisoning them en masse. These animals were wiped out from much of their native range in the lower 48 states by the early 20th century, and their more recent return represents a reckoning with the way we have used and abused the land since.
Now that we have more understanding of the ecological importance of every native species that exists in an ecosystem, there's no excuse to keep defaulting to killing wolves and other predators. Conservationists have offered ranchers a wide variety of solutions to protect their stock, from wolf-proof fences and hazing protocols to livestock guardian dogs. Ranchers can request financial compensation in many Western states for wolf-killed livestock and other losses, though not every rancher wants to differentiate between a cow killed by wolves, and one that died of other causes but was scavenged by wolves postmortem. And, unsurprisingly, some ranchers file fraudulent claims to game the system.
But there also remains the attitude that ranchers should be able to let their cattle run wherever they want on private or public land, and not have to monitor them or create adequate barriers against predators. The entitlement they feel to enormous areas of land, to include public lands that are supposed to be for everyone's use, has its roots in the assumption that "taming the land" for economic profit is more important than any other use. They want any potential threat to be preemptively removed for their convenience, no matter the ecological cost--or human cost, for that matter. Don't forget that every ranch in the West was once the homeland of indigenous people who were, more often than not, forcibly and violently removed so the ranchers' predecessors could move in with their livestock.
It's time for ranchers to accept that they're going to have to adjust to the return of native animals that have lived in these ecosystems for thousands of years. It is already beyond generous that states are willing to pay ranchers for lost cattle. They need to return the favor by working with conservationists to find solutions that reduce predation without just shooting the predatory species native to their region. Ranching as it stands today can only be achieved by the elimination of native animals from the land, but it's not the only way to successfully raise livestock in wild areas. It's time for new solutions that benefit both the cattle and the wildlife alike.
#wolves#gray wolves#farming#ranching#conservation#shoot shovel shut up#environment#nature#wildlife#animals#ecology#scicomm#cattle#habitat restoration#restoration ecology#rewilding
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Mutuals let's do this
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#CowAppreciationDay 🐮🐄:

Shiro Kasamatsu 笠松 紫浪 (Japan, 1898-1991) Pasturing of Cattle, 1979 color woodblock print
#animals in art#animal holiday#20th century art#print#woodblock print#ukiyoe#Shiro Kasamatsu#Japanese art#East Asian art#Asian art#1970s#cow#cows#cattle#Cow Appreciation Day
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cow ref 5.0! the definitive cow reference for the foreseeable future! look no further than here for THE cow reference!
🐮💚
#cow#reference sheet#ref sheet#bovine#cattle#furry#fursona#my art#oc: cow#this is the longest ive spent on a sheet FR FR this time jesus cHRIST#ive been chipping away at this thing for Months#i went thru like 4 different layout sketches before settling on this#im really happy with it!!!!!! WOO#genderqueer#trans
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Doodling for fun~
#cow#bull#character#art#artwork#drawing#characterdesign#illustration#anthro#anthropomorphic#anthroart#animal#beastman#landscape#environment#background#backgroundart#bovine#cattle#dog#canine
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Sorry! You may resume grazing.
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sold
I really enjoy painting with a sponge lol, can you tell?



#pottery#ceramics#ceramic art#underglaze painting#cave art#cave paintings#goats#cows#cattle#painting#pottery painting#wheel thrown pottery#generously made and given to me by my studio partner/mom lol#glazeware
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Ancient Egyptian wooden model of a cow with her nursing calf, made in the 11th or 12th Dynasty of the Middle Kingdom (= ca. 2030-1850 BCE). Excavated at Asyut (Lycopolis) between 1910 and 1914. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Photo credit: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
#art#art history#ancient art#Egypt#Ancient Egypt#Egyptian art#Ancient Egyptian art#Middle Kingdom#sculpture#woodwork#animals in art#cattle#Metropolitan Museum of Art
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"Cattle in the pasture" by Anna Tuomisalo
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