scholarly journals Possible impact and adaptation to climate change in livestock production in Southern Africa

Author(s):  
Never Assan ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 42 (42) ◽  
pp. 115-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Mushawemhuka ◽  
Jayne M. Rogerson ◽  
Jarkko Saarinen

Abstract Climate and weather are important resources for tourism. In particular, nature-based tourism activities and operations are largely dependent on and affected by environmental conditions and changes. Due to the significant socio-economic role of the nature-based tourism and the tourism industry, in general, in the region of southern Africa it is important to understand the dynamics between the industry and climate change. A key aspect of this understanding are perceptions and adaptation preparedness of tourism operators towards the estimated impact of climate change. There is a dearth of empirical studies on climate change perceptions and adaptation in nature-based tourism operations across southern Africa and specifically from Zimbabwe. This research gap is addressed in this article which provides an exploratory analysis of the nature of climate change adaptation practices occurring in southern Africa using evidence from Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dolapo Enahoro ◽  
Jason Sircely ◽  
Randall B. Boone ◽  
Stephen Oloo ◽  
Adam M. Komarek ◽  
...  

The demand for livestock-derived foods has steadily grown over the past decades and rising incomes and human populations are expected to see demand further increase. It is unclear if current livestock feed resources are adequately prepared to meet future demand especially given the looming challenges of climate change. Many feeds such as grasses, crop by-products, and other biomass may not be widely grown commercially or sold in formal markets but are critical sources of livestock feed in many low-resource settings in which ruminant livestock production is important. The availability of these feed types can determine the extent to which the livestock sector can expand to meet growing, and sometimes critical, demand for animal-source foods. In this paper, we compare country-level projections of livestock demand from a global economic model to simulated data on feed biomass production. Our comparisons account separately for beef, lamb, and dairy demand. The data allow us to assess the future sufficiency of key sources of feed biomass, and hence aspects of the expansion capacity of livestock production in selected countries in Southern Africa. Our simulation results project that given the interacting effects of projected climate change and changes in income and population in the region, there will not be enough feed biomass produced domestically to meet growing demand for livestock products. For three types of feed biomass (feed crops including grains, grasses, and crop by-products) for which future livestock feed sufficiency was examined, our results showed feed sufficiency declines for all three feed types in Malawi and Mozambique, for two out of three in South Africa and for one of three in Zambia, under intermediate and extreme scenarios of climate change in 2050. Our results suggest an urgent need to improve feed biomass productivity to support future supply of animal protein in the study countries.


2014 ◽  
pp. 148-189
Author(s):  
Angie Poliquit

The socio-economic contribution of livestock production to global livelihood and food security offsets its negative effects on the environment through greenhouse gas (GHG) emission. Livestocks are emitters of GHGs, carbon dioxide (CO2) from land conversion and deforestation, nitrous oxide (N2O) from manure and slurry, and methane (CH4) from animal digestion which significantly contribute to climate change. Climate change has both direct and indirect impacts on animal farming. Thus, the main concern nowadays is toward the development of programs for adaptation and mitigation of GHG emissions. This review provides knowledge about climate change impacts on livestock production systems with the identification of strategies for livestock adaptation to climate change and mitigation of GHG emissions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 149 (4) ◽  
pp. 437-449 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. N. SEO

SUMMARYThe present paper provides a geographically scaled analysis of adaptation to climate change using adoption of agricultural systems observed across Africa. Usingc. 9000 farm surveys, spatial logit models were applied to explain observed agricultural system choices by climate variables after accounting for soils, geography and other household characteristics. The results reveal that strong neighbourhood effects exist and a spatial re-sampling and bootstrapping approach can remove them. The crops-only system is adopted most frequently in the lowland humid forest, lowland sub-humid, mid-elevation sub-humid Agro-Ecological Zones (AEZs) and in the highlands in the east and in southern Africa. Integrated farming is favoured in the lowland dry savannah, moist savannah and semi-arid zones in West Africa and eastern coastal zones. A livestock-only system is favoured most in the mid/high-elevation moist savannahs located in southern Africa. Under a hot and dry Canadian Climate Centre (CCC) scenario, the crops-only system should move out from the currently favoured regions of humid zones in the lowlands towards the mid-/high elevations. It declines by more than 5% in the lowland savannahs. Integrated farming should increase across all the AEZs by as much as 5%, but less so in the deserts or in the humid forest zones in the mid-/high elevations. A livestock-only system should increase by 2–5% in the lowland semi-arid, dry savannah and moist savannah zones in the lowlands. Adaptation measures should be carefully scaled, up or down, considering geographic and ecological differentials as well as household characteristics, as proposed in the present study.


2011 ◽  
Vol 15 (16) ◽  
pp. 1-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Montenegro Lapola ◽  
Ruediger Schaldach ◽  
Joseph Alcamo ◽  
Alberte Bondeau ◽  
Siwa Msangi ◽  
...  

Abstract Climate change scenarios vary considerably over the Amazon region, with an extreme scenario projecting a dangerous (from the human perspective) increase of 3.8°C in temperature and 30% reduction in precipitation by 2050. The impacts of such climate change on Amazonian land-use dynamics, agricultural production, and deforestation rates are still to be determined. In this study, the authors make a first attempt to assess these impacts through a systemic approach, using a spatially explicit modeling framework to project crop yield and land-use/land-cover changes in the Brazilian Amazon by 2050. The results show that, without any adaptation, climate change may exert a critical impact on the yields of crops commonly cultivated in the Amazon (e.g., soybean yields are reduced by 44% in the worst-case scenario). Therefore, following baseline projections on crop and livestock production, a scenario of severe regional climate change would cause additional deforestation of 181 000 km2 (+20%) in the Amazon and 240 000 km2 (+273%) in the Cerrado compared to a scenario of moderate climate change. Putting an end to deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon forest by 2020 (and of the Cerrado by 2025) would require either a reduction of 26%–40% in livestock production until 2050 or a doubling of average livestock density from 0.74 to 1.46 head per hectare. These results suggest that (i) climate change can affect land use in ways not previously explored, such as the reduction of yields entailing further deforestation, and (ii) there is a need for an integrated/multidisciplinary plan for adaptation to climate change in the Amazon.


2021 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 136-148
Author(s):  
A. O. Iyiola-Tunji

This paper is focused on reviewing the three key pillars of climate-smart agriculture (CSA) in  relation to livestock production (i.e., increased productivity, mitigation of greenhouse gases  emissions and adaptation to climate change) while exploring the development intervention  options for Nigerian livestock farmers. The most serious impacts of climate change are  anticipated in grazing systems because of their dependence on climatic conditions and the  natural resource base, and their limited adaptation opportunities. Impacts are expected to be  most severe in arid and semi-arid grazing systems at low latitudes, where higher  temperatures and lower rainfall are expected to reduce yields on range lands and increase  land degradation. The dual pathways of responses between climate change and livestock  production activities were depicted in this review. It is of note that climate change as a natural  phenomenon works on the principle of causes and effect. The actions and in-actions of man  will dictate the type of results obtainable in his immediate environment. Means by which  livestock farmers can mitigate the GHGs and adapt to the effect of climate changes were  discussed in this paper. Concerted efforts at ameliorating the effect of climate change on  livestock production are needed. The smart options for rearing livestock are capable of  mitigating the attendant effect of production activities of the stocks, reducing the stress  obtainable from altered environment and ensuring food security. Nigeria as a country will  need to evolve policies that will ensure promotion and subsequent adoptions of technologies  that are smart in terms of increasing productivity of farm animals, reducing emissions of  GHG and positively altering the effect of climate change.   Cet article se concentre sur l'examen des trois piliers clés de l'agriculture intelligente face au  climat (ASC) en relation avec la production animale (c.-à-d. Augmentation de la  productivité, atténuation des émissions de gaz à effet de serre et adaptation au changement  climatique) tout en explorant les options d'intervention de développement pour les éleveurs  nigérians. Les impacts les plus graves du changement climatique sont anticipés dans les  systèmes de pâturage en raison de leur dépendance aux conditions climatiques et de la base  de ressources naturelles, et de leurs possibilités d'adaptation limitées. Les impacts devraient  être les plus graves dans les systèmes de pâturage arides et semi-arides à basses latitudes, où  des températures plus élevées et des précipitations plus faibles devraient réduire les  rendements sur les pâturages et augmenter la dégradation des terres. Les doubles voies de  réponses entre le changement climatique et les activités de production animale ont été  décrites dans cette revue. Il est à noter que le changement climatique en tant que phénomène  naturel fonctionne sur le principe des causes et des effets. Les actions et les in-actions de  l'homme dicteront le type de résultats pouvant être obtenus dans son environnement immédiat. Les moyens par lesquels les éleveurs peuvent atténuer les GES et s'adapter aux effets des changements climatiques ont été discutés dans ce document. Des efforts concertés pour atténuer les effets du changement climatique sur la production animale sont nécessaires. Les options intelligentes pour l'élevage du bétail sont capables d'atténuer l'effet connexe des activités de production des stocks, de réduire le stress résultant de l'altération de l'environnement et d'assurer la sécurité alimentaire. Le Nigéria, en tant que pays, devra élaborer des politiques qui assureront la promotion et l'adoption ultérieure de technologies intelligentes en termes d'augmentation de la productivité des animaux d'élevage, de réduction des émissions de GES et de modification positive des effets du changement climatique.


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