Both chicken and cattle have gone feral in various parts of the world so they would happily survive without people.
At least the Lorax (and all of his friends) would come back.
How would cows do it? I’ve always assumed that without people to milk them and assist in births they’d die out quickly.
Probably mostly true in terms of the birthing aspect, but I suspect a few would manage to give birth naturally (although I’m not sure); assuming that they managed to give birth sucessfully, the milking operation would be carried out by the calf.
Aren’t you forgetting that is how it is for beef herds? Lots of range grazing beef cattle in Queensland.
Dairy cattle produce high milk yields because they are fed high quality feed including grain. Remove that level of nutrition, yields fall. Also, if the calf or milking machine doesn’t remove the milk, production fall rapidly and eventually ceases.
The vast magority of dairy cattle give birth unassisted. Again, the problem with assisted births is foetal/pelvic diproportion i.e. the calf is too big, and a magor contributing factor is high levels of nutrition. Left to fend for themselves calves would be smaller and birth difficulties would be less.
In a place near Pittsboro, NC, a chicken carrier semi truck overturned near a bridge. There were feral chickens in the woods near that bridge for years.
The bridge wound up being referred to by the locals as “chicken bridge”. I’ve since moved, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it stuck.
"Lots of range grazing beef cattle in Queensland. "
And Texas. And Mexico. And Brazil.
I said “I imagine.” I thought the California Sea Otters were so few in numbers and their habitat so overwhelmed by other predators that have moved in since their numbers dwindled that they could not sustain their population by breeding in the wild, and therefore have to be bred in captivity? That’s what the woman at the Monterey Bay Aquarium told me, anyway.
There are so few of them b/c a virus (can’t remember which) pratically destroyed them. They now rely heavily upon humans to feed them b/c they don’t have enough food of their own to sustain them on Santa Catalina Island. I’m sure if they made it to the mainland there wouldn’t be a problem.
I hadn’t heard of that flower in Hawaii (and I have friends in TropAg! Holding out on me!) so I had to look it up. 'Tis indeed true according to this site:
I think you may have misunderstood, at least in part. Most of the buildup of the California Sea Otter’s population since their “rediscovery” in the 1930s (they had been thought to be extinct) has been due to breeding in the wild. Lately there has been a bit of a decline, perhaps due to pollution. A check on the web indicates there is a small captive breeding program, but as far as I can see there’s no indication that releases from this program are having a major impact on wild populations.
Part of the confusion from your post was because you said “mate”
when you seem to have meant “reproduce.”
OK, that makes more sense - I probably heard it wrong. Thanks for clearing that up.
(I did mean “reproduce” - sorry).