Vulnerability of grazing and confined livestock in the Northern Great Plains to projected mid- and late-twenty-first century climate Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • 2017, Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht (outside the USA). The Northern Great Plains (NGP) region of the USAwhich comprises Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraskais a largely rural area that provides numerous ecosystem services, including livestock products, cultural services, and conservation of biological diversity. The region contains 25% of the Nations beef cattle and approximately one-third of the confined beef cattle, as well as the largest remaining native prairie in the USthe Northern Mixedgrass Prairie. With rising atmospheric CO2, the NGP is projected to experience warmer and longer growing seasons, greater climatic variability, and more extreme events (e.g., increased occurrence of large precipitation events). These climatic changes may affect livestock production both directly via physiological impacts on animals and indirectly via modifications to forage, invasion of undesirable plants, and increased exposure to parasites. This raises concerns about the vulnerability of grazing livestock operations and confined livestock operations to projected changes in mid- (2050) and late- (2085) twenty-first century climate. Our objectives are to (1) describe the NGPs exposure to temperature and precipitation trends, inter-annual variability, and extreme events; (2) evaluate the sensitivity of beef cattle production to direct and indirect effects imposed by these projected climatic changes; and (3) provide a typology of adaptation strategies to minimize adverse consequences of projected changes and maximize beneficial consequences. Agricultural managers have developed considerable adaptive capacity to contend with environmental and economic variability. However, projected climatic changes, especially the increased frequency and magnitude of weather extremes, will require even greater adaptive capacity to maintain viable production systems. Consequently, regional vulnerability to projected climatic changes will be determined not only by ecological responses but also by the adaptive capacity of individual managers. Adaptive capacity in the NGP will differ from other regions, in part because projections suggest some opportunities for increased livestock production. Adaptations in both grazing and confined beef cattle systems will require enhanced decision-making skills capable of integrating biophysical, social, and economic considerations. Social learning networks that support integration of experimental and experiential knowledgesuch as lessons learned from early adopters and involvement with science-based organizationscan help enhance decision-making and climate adaptation planning. Many adaptations have already been implemented by a subset of producers in this region, providing opportunities for assessment, further development, and greater adoption. Context-specific decision-making can also be enhanced through science-management partnerships, which aim to build adaptive capacity that recognizes multiple production and conservation/environmental goals.

published proceedings

  • Climatic Change

altmetric score

  • 0.75

author list (cited authors)

  • Derner, J., Briske, D., Reeves, M., Brown-Brandl, T., Meehan, M., Blumenthal, D., ... Peck, D.

citation count

  • 51

complete list of authors

  • Derner, Justin||Briske, David||Reeves, Matt||Brown-Brandl, Tami||Meehan, Miranda||Blumenthal, Dana||Travis, William||Augustine, David||Wilmer, Hailey||Scasta, Derek||Hendrickson, John||Volesky, Jerry||Edwards, Laura||Peck, Dannele

publication date

  • January 2018