Practical considerations for adaptive strategies by US grazing land managers with a changing climate

Author:

Derner Justin D.1ORCID,Wilmer Hailey2,Stackhouse‐Lawson Kim3,Place Sara3,Boggess Mark4

Affiliation:

1. USDA‐ARS, Rangeland Resources & Systems Research Unit Cheyenne WY USA

2. USDA‐ARS, Range Sheep Production Efficiency Research Unit Dubois ID USA

3. AgNext and Department of Animal Sciences Colorado State University Fort Collins CO USA

4. USDA‐ARS, Meat Animal Research Center Clay Center NE USA

Abstract

AbstractWe outline practical considerations for grazing land adaptations with a changing climate, with an emphasis on the ranch operation scale and specific attention to directional climate changes and increased climate variability. These adaptive strategies fall into two themes: flexibility and learning under uncertainty. Ranches and livestock operations with greater land, social, or other capital resources may have more flexibility. Risk can be reduced for managers (ranchers, farmers, operators, and livestock managers) through participation in conservation or farm policy programs and/or market‐based approaches. Bolstering adaptive capacity across landscapes and time can originate from social capital of operators and strategic collaborations among managers and scientists. As climate diverges from historical baselines and the realm of managers’ experiential knowledge, new conceptual frameworks are needed to structure conversations, influence research relevancy and impact, and drive imaginative solutions among researchers, managers, and local communities for socio‐ecological systems. We provide simplified frameworks to help guide conversation, future research, and new imaginative solutions for systems‐scale knowledge needs and adaptation to address increasingly uncertain and complex change at multiple scales. Practical considerations for adaptive strategies by grazing land managers with a changing climate will be accelerated through (1) collaborative efforts among managers and explicitly with science–management partnerships becoming more mainstream, (2) co‐produced research with managers and researchers at ranch scales, (3) development of communities of practice and associated learning opportunities, and (4) continued co‐development and advancement of technologies and tools that result in high uptake adoption by ranch managers.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Soil Science,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

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