Challenges and priorities for modelling livestock health and pathogens in the context of climate change

Şeyda Özkan, Andrea Vitali, Nicola Lacetera, Barbara Amon, André Bannink, Dave J. Bartley, Isabel Blanco-penedo, Yvette De Haas, Isabelle Dufrasne, John Elliott, Vera Eory, Naomi J. Fox, Phil C. Garnsworthy, Nicolas Gengler, Hedi Hammami, Ilias Kyriazakis, David Leclère, Françoise Lessire, Michael Macleod, Timothy P. RobinsonAlejandro Ruete, Daniel L. Sandars, Shailesh Shrestha, Alistair W. Stott, Stanislaw Twardy, Marie-Laure Vanrobays, Bouda Vosough Ahmadi, Isabelle Weindl, Nick Wheelhouse, Adrian G. Williams, Hefin W. Williams, Anthony J. Wilson, Søren Østergaard, Richard P. Kipling

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Climate change has the potential to impair livestock health, with consequences for animal welfare, productivity, greenhouse gas emissions, and human livelihoods and health. Modelling has an important role in assessing the impacts of climate change on livestock systems and the efficacy of potential adaptation strategies, to support decision making for more efficient, resilient and sustainable production. However, a coherent set of challenges and research priorities for modelling livestock health and pathogens under climate change has not previously been available. To identify such challenges and priorities, researchers from across Europe were engaged in a horizon-scanning study, involving workshop and questionnaire based exercises and focussed literature reviews. Eighteen key challenges were identified and grouped into six categories based on subject-specific and capacity building requirements. Across a number of challenges, the need for inventories relating model types to different applications (e.g. the pathogen species, region, scale of focus and purpose to which they can be applied) was identified, in order to identify gaps in capability in relation to the impacts of climate change on animal health. The need for collaboration and learning across disciplines was highlighted in several challenges, e.g. to better understand and model complex ecological interactions between pathogens, vectors, wildlife hosts and livestock in the context of climate change. Collaboration between socio-economic and biophysical disciplines was seen as important for better engagement with stakeholders and for improved modelling of the costs and benefits of poor livestock health. The need for more comprehensive validation of empirical relationships, for harmonising terminology and measurements, and for building capacity for under-researched nations, systems and health problems indicated the importance of joined up approaches across nations. The challenges and priorities identified can help focus the development of modelling capacity and future research structures in this vital field. Well-funded networks capable of managing the long-term development of shared resources are required in order to create a cohesive modelling community equipped to tackle the complex challenges of climate change.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)130-144
Number of pages14
JournalEnvironmental Research
Volume151
Early online date29 Jul 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01 Nov 2016

Keywords

  • animal health
  • climate change
  • greenhouse gas emissions
  • pathogens
  • modelling

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