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Preparing Agriculture for a Changing
World
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Range scientist Jon Hanson notes the effects of four global change
scenarios on calf weaning weights. He then compares them with the Range
Dependency Index (on the monitor) showing the percentage of a region's income
that is linked to range beef production.
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Many people use a computer in
day-to-day activities, be it to get cash from an automated teller machine or to
compose a letter. But scientists and engineers first used--and continue to
use--the power of computers to analyze complex problems like potential climate
change.
Computer models help researchers get a handle on how environmental changes
might affect plants, animals, water supplies, and even human comfort. In the
agricultural arena, these models often go by a strange-appearing combinations
of letters. Some of these are EPIC, RZWQM, CREAMS, SRM, WEPP, SHAW, NLEAP, and
SPUR2.
"Historically, ARS has solved agricultural problems on field, regional,
and sometimes even a national scale--but not on a global level, " says ARS
soil scientist Ronald F. Follett. "But because we have decades of research
on soil, water, crops, natural resources, and other issues that are important
to global change, scientists who run global models are looking to ARS for
information."
Based in Fort Collins, Colorado, Follett heads up research that focuses on
the cycling of carbon and key greenhouse gases between the atmosphere and land.
From the beginning of ARS' involvement in the U.S. Global Change Research
Program, scientists recognized the need to develop models of plant and soil
processes and to scale them up to make regional predictions. The agency's
scientists were well qualified to do this, having developed models that worked
at the field level for many years.
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Water Quality Model (RZWQM).
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"ARS researchers nationwide continue to
develop the needed models," says Basil Acock, an ARS plant physiologist at
Beltsville. "Many are modular so that each component can be plugged in or
taken out without affecting the overall function of the larger model. This
standardization allows researchers to borrow various components developed by
others, and it avoids duplication of effort," he says.
The models will improve estimates of plant growth and yield, greenhouse gas
emissions and sinks, and water and energy flows on cropped lands, forests, and
rangelands. Others will simulate changes expected because of pests, diseases,
and salinity.
The scientists run "what would happen if..." scenarios over 10- to
100-year periods. That should provide clues on how to mitigate global climate
change.
"Whatever model we use to predict change, it must be responsive to all
environmental factors--temperature, nutrients, water, and more importantly,
land management," says Jon D. Hanson, an ARS rangeland scientist at Fort
Collins, Colorado. He developed SPUR2 (Simulation of Production and Utilization
of Rangelands), one of the agency's most complete models for predicting how
climate change would affect U.S. cattle-grazing areas. His research suggests
that the country's best grazing lands could gradually shift more to the east
and north.
ARS is uniquely equipped to conduct studies in global change because it has
acquired long-term hydrology and climate databases, some covering more than 40
years. The hydrology data come from measurements made on large watersheds
located near Tucson, Arizona; Tifton, Georgia; Boise, Idaho; Oxford,
Mississippi; Coshocton, Ohio; El Reno, Oklahoma; University Park, Pennsylvania;
and Temple, Texas. Much of the data is archived at the ARS Water Data Center,
part of the Hydrology Laboratory at Beltsville. ARS laboratories in Fort
Collins, Coshocton, El Reno, and Temple provide the climate data.
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Global warming predictions indicate that the amount and timing of
snowmelt and runoff may change in western basins like ARS' Reynolds Creek
Experimental Watershed near Boise, Idaho.
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Some of the best water on Earth comes from
the melting snowpacks of high-mountain watersheds in the western United States.
These rugged basins provide 50 to 80 percent of the West's water for cities,
farms, ranches, hydroelectric power plants, and other downstream destinations.
"But even a modest warming or cooling of our climate," says Keith
R. Cooley, "could change the timing and amount of snowmelt." He's an
ARS hydrologist at Boise, Idaho.
That's why Cooley and colleagues are expanding and fine-tuning
computer-based mathematical models that predict how changes in the Earth's
climate may quicken--or delay--snowmelt from tomorrow's snowpacks. Equally as
important, they are working to improve their estimates of changes in the amount
of runoff that snowpacks of the future will provide.
Three such models predicted remarkably similar trends when used to project
changes in timing and yield from western snowpacks. The study was the first of
its kind to encompass such a diverse assortment of western watersheds, says
Albert Rango, an ARS hydrologist at Beltsville.
For the experiment, Rango and Cooley selected seven watersheds scattered
throughout four western states and Canada. These basins ranged from
sagebrush-clad slopes that receive an annual average of about 20 inches of rain
or snow to thick forests of spruce and fir that receive about 50 inches. The
researchers programmed the models to predict what might happen to snowfields if
the Earth's atmosphere were 5oF to 9oF warmer.
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Estimating the volume of water contained in snowpack is vital to
forecasting how much water will be available for agriculture and other uses.
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Global warming, the researchers report, would
cause snowmelt and runoff to start--and to peak--earlier in the year. "The
greatest volume of runoff could occur not in May or June, our typical snowmelt
months," says Cooley, "but instead in March or April. That means
western farmers of the next century may have to make new choices when deciding
what kinds of crops to plant."
What's more, the snowpack might yield less water. "A warmer
climate," explains Cooley, "not only causes the runoff to occur
sooner, but may also cause less snow to accumulate at certain elevations.
At the time it was selected for the seven-basin study, the Snowmelt Runoff
Model, or SRM, that Rango developed relied primarily on temperature estimates.
Today's SRM takes into account two other key factors--radiation and cloud
cover. Rango says a cooperative research and development agreement between ARS,
the industry-sponsored Electric Power Research Institute, and the U.S.
Geological Survey funded part of the work that led to the newer, more savvy
model.
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Arid regions, which get less than 10 inches
of precipitation annually, and semiarid regions, which get from 10 to 20
inches, constitute about one-third of the Earth's land area. Any changes the
planet experiences in the future could have a profound effect on these regions
because there is a close relationship between these ecosystems' health and the
weather and water cycle. To help measure and predict such long-term changes,
scientists from nine federal agencies, eight universities, six foreign
agencies, and one private organization are working together on the SALSA
program.
Their outdoor laboratory is the 2,500-square-mile Upper San Pedro River
Basin that spans the border between northern Sonora in Mexico and southeastern
Arizona. Scientists hope SALSA will establish this basin as the North American
site where remotely sensed data from satellites and aircraft, coupled with
computer models that predict changes, will be calibrated and validated.
"The basin is ideal for our research; it contains climatic diversity
and five distinct vegetation types over distances as short as 12 miles. The
Nature Conservancy has declared the San Pedro riparian corridor one of the
'Twelve Great Places of the Western Hemisphere'," says David C. Goodrich.
An ARS hydraulic engineer at Tucson, he heads the overall SALSA program, with
ARS as the lead agency.
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Intensive hydrologic data have been collected
over the past 30 years from part of this basin, ARS' Walnut Gulch Experimental
Watershed. This information will be added to that collected as part of SALSA,
which began in 1995.
This year, the program will concentrate on understanding the San Pedro
riparian system on the U.S. side of the border. Scientists will establish
baseline data by measuring surface water, groundwater, and transpiration.
They'll compare their measurements to readings collected from satellites and
aircraft during five overflights through October 1997.
Over the entire basin, SALSA team members from ARS, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Tennessee Valley Authority, University of Arizona, and
Mexico and France will concentrate on energy balance measurements from several
areas, vegetative characterization from satellites, and large-scale land cover
change using ground and historical satellite data.
Scientists expect to monitor how humans change the area. "We can
already see some evidence from satellite images. The U.S.-Mexico border is
clearly visible because of different livestock grazing practices in the two
countries. The presence and possible expansion of an enormous copper mining
operation at the headwaters of the San Pedro may also have significant impact
on the basin's water quality and quantity," adds Goodrich.
Future plans call for collecting and archiving information like
precipitation and solar radiation from the different areas over a 5- to 10-year
period. Then a basin-scale hydrological model will integrate these and other
variables.
Scientists hope the effort will improve how computer models predict the
impact of environmental changes on the hydrology and ecology of this and other
large basins.
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This page last updated June 2005.
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