NewsJuly 5, 2013

Cattle Weight Loss from Warming Means Slimmer Profits

By Tim Radford, Climate News Network

LONDON − America’s cattle herds will shrink – not in number, but in weight and yield – as the climate warms, according to new research that delivers an ominous warning for farmers.

An extensive study of bison − those great wild cattle that evolved to graze the prairies of North America − has confirmed that animals from warmer, drier grasslands weigh considerably less on average than those from cool, wet ranges.

An extensive study of bison confirmed that animals from warmer, drier grasslands weigh considerably less on average than those from cool, wet ranges.
Credit: Beatlesnature

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Joseph Craine, a researcher from Kansas State University’s Division of Biology, reports in the Public Library of Science journal PloS One that he analyses weight, age and sex data from 290,000 animals in 22 herds throughout the U.S.

He found that the average 7-year-old male bison in South Dakota weighed around 1900 lbs., while counterparts in Oklahoma clocked in at 1300 lbs.

Ominous change

The difference in mean annual temperature between the two ranges was 11°C, and the two sets of values told an ominous story of change in a warming world − not just for wild bison, but also for domestic cattle.

The world is almost certain to warm by more than 2°C on average in this century, and the rise could be as great at 4°C.

“We know that temperatures are going to go up,” Dr. Craine says. “We also know that warmer grasslands have grasses with less protein, and we now know that warmer grasslands have smaller grazers. It all lines up to suggest that climate change will cause grasses to have less protein, and cause grazers to gain less weight in future.”

As temperatures rise, precipitation is likely to fall, with consequences for plant growth. If the same reduction in weight gain applies to beef cattle as to bison, the finding is “a pretty clear indication” of bad news for food security and for the grazers.

There are around 500,000 bison in the U.S. – the species was all but extinguished during the 19th century – and more than 90 million cattle. Dr. Craine calculates that each 1°C rise in average temperatures could cost farmers $1 billion in profits, either through direct reduction in weight gains or in the costs of additional supplementary feeds.

The difference in mean annual temperature between two ranges was 11°C, and the two sets of values told an ominous story of change in a warming world − not just for wild bison, but also for domestic cattle.
Credit: flickr/Craig Bennett

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Dwindling size

The research is in line with other findings this year. Climate News Network reported in January that evidence from 55 million years ago − when the world warmed by 6°C – was unearthed during drilling in the National Science Foundation’s Bighorn Basin Coring Project in Wyoming. It indicated that animal size tended to dwindle with rising temperatures, almost certainly in response to changes in nutritional value.

The implication that mammals could dwarf and humans shrink towards hobbit-like stature under a changing climate was tragically confirmed by a study of body heights among children in north-east Brazil, as Climate News Network reported in February this year.

In response to near-starvation conditions, children who were brought up on a diet of rats, snakes and cacti reached an average adult size of only 4 feet, 6 inches.

Tim Radford is a reporter for Climate News Network.Climate News Network is a news service led by four veteran British environmental reporters and broadcasters. It delivers news and commentary about climate change for free to media outlets worldwide.