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Why the Cattle Industry Might Not Use a Drug that Cuts Down on Feedlot Pollution

Hereford cattle at the Finney County Feedyard.  (Photo by Corinne Boyer / Kansas News Service)
Hereford cattle at the Finney County Feedyard. (Photo by Corinne Boyer / Kansas News Service)

Anyone who’s been downwind from a Kansas feedlot knows the pungent odor of cattle crowded together while they’re fattened for slaughter. Now there’s a drug for cattle that can cut back on the threat that ammonia poses to air and water quality. The only problem? The cattle industry doesn’t have much incentive to use it. Corinne Boyer of the Kansas News Service reports from Garden City on why the drug may be a tough sell. 


Corinne Boyer is a reporter for High Plains Public Radio and a contributor to  the Kansas News Service.  Follow her on Twitter.

The Kansas News Service reports on the health and well-being of Kansans, their communities and civic life.  Discover more stories at ksnewsservice.org.