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Study sheds light on global risk of heat stress to cattle

Farmer's Weekly

|

November 03, 2023

Research shows climate change may have a negative impact on cattle farming in some regions, says Jorisna Bonthuys. Farmers must do more to secure their herd's welfare and their own bottom line.

- Jorisna Bonthuys

Study sheds light on global risk of heat stress to cattle

More than a billion cows across the globe could be exposed to heat stress by 2100. New research on this topic was recently published in the journal Environmental Research Letters. In this paper, Dr Michelle North and her co-authors explore the linkages between cattle farming, unchecked climate change and land use practices, and heat stress.

In this cross-institutional, transdisciplinary study, North, a veterinarian and climate change researcher at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, collaborated with three other scientists from South Africa and the US: Dr Chris Trisos, Birgitt Ouweneel and James Franke. Trisos is an ecologist and climate-change researcher at the University of Cape Town’s African Climate and Development Institute, and Ouweneel is a researcher linked to the same institute. Franke is a postgraduate earth scientist at the University of Chicago.

The team studied how heat stress affects cattle, predicted how land use and emissions may increase heat risk, and recommended adapting farming practices in certain areas. The researchers analysed today’s heat and humidity conditions across the world. They estimated how these conditions will affect cattle in future decades, depending on different levels of emissions and forms of land use.

They project that cattle will potentially face lethal heat stress in regions such as tropical South America, Central America, Equatorial Africa, and South and Southeast Asia by the end of this century.

HEAT STRESS POSES CHALLENGES 

Their findings underscore heat stress as a present and future challenge for livestock farmers.

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Christmas books to charm and delight

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time to read

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time to read

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Grandparents below, and kids upstairs!

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time to read

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The Unseen Protector

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time to read

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Farmer's Weekly

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I am a 67-year-old farmer residing on a farm near Harding in KwaZulu-Natal.

time to read

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Pet-friendly family accommodation in the Waterberg

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time to read

4 mins

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The Shuman legacy continues under the watchful eye of a fifth-generation farmer

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time to read

9 mins

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History's most famous musket

The Brown Bess musket was the standard issue firearm for British forces from 1722 to 1838. As Mike Burgess writes, this much-loved weapon contributed significantly to the consolidation of the British Empire that by 1922 was in control of a quarter of the earth's surface.

time to read

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Farmer's Weekly

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Muddy soil can cause lameness due to footrot

It is important to clean legs and hooves and check for lameness in horses on a daily basis, especially when there is heavy rain

time to read

2 mins

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Farmer's Weekly

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The role of family farmers in sub- Saharan Africa

As part of the United Nations' recognition of family farming as a vital component of the global agricultural landscape, the decade between 2019 to 1928 was declared the Decade for Family Farming globally. Annelie Coleman compiled this report.

time to read

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