Cattle are ruminants, which means that they have developed a special system of digestion that involves the microbial fermentation of food in a large fermentation vat (the reticulorumen) prior to its exposure to the body's own digestive enzymes
The UK cattle industry in 2017 had 1.6 million beef cows, 0.4 million in-calf beef heifers, 1.9 million dairy cows, and 0.3 million in-calf dairy heifers
Bulls should exhibit strong signs of sexual behaviour ("libido"), including the flehman response ("lipcurl") in response to the smell of a cow in oestrus
Farm assurance schemes were originally set up by the agricultural industry and food retailers in response to consumer pressure following a number of food safety scares
There are currently over 20 separate schemes in existence in the UK, and although they are voluntary, they presently cover over 90% of the UK production of milk and pork and 65% of the beef and lamb production
The current schemes have been criticised by some (including the Food Standards Agency) as being too closely connected to the agricultural industry and not representing consumer concerns
An independent "umbrella" organisation that assimilated the majority of schemes, with the establishment of minimum core criteria for individual schemes and more co-operation between schemes to avoid confusion
Almost all milk purchasers insist that their dairy farmers are members of the Dairy Scheme (over 90% of UK milk is covered by the scheme), and the dairy farms have to comply with the set standards
The standards are set by representatives of farmers (NFU), the dairy industry (Federation of Milk Groups, Dairy Industry Federation) and veterinary surgeons (BCVA), in consultation with milk industry representatives