Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed?

Current approaches to estimate freshwater use in livestock production systems generally fail to consider the competition for water resources with alternative uses, such as production of food crops food or other ecosystem services. This article presents a new method to account for the competition for...

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Main Authors: Ran, Ylva, Middelaar, Corina E.M. van, Lannerstad, Mats, Herrero, Mario, Boer, Imke J.M. de
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80953
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author Ran, Ylva
Middelaar, Corina E.M. van
Lannerstad, Mats
Herrero, Mario
Boer, Imke J.M. de
author_browse Boer, Imke J.M. de
Herrero, Mario
Lannerstad, Mats
Middelaar, Corina E.M. van
Ran, Ylva
author_facet Ran, Ylva
Middelaar, Corina E.M. van
Lannerstad, Mats
Herrero, Mario
Boer, Imke J.M. de
author_sort Ran, Ylva
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Current approaches to estimate freshwater use in livestock production systems generally fail to consider the competition for water resources with alternative uses, such as production of food crops food or other ecosystem services. This article presents a new method to account for the competition for freshwater use between food crops and animal feed, while assessing freshwater use in livestock production systems. The developed water use ratio (WUR) is defined as the maximum amount of human digestible protein (HDP) derived from food crops from the consumptive water use (CWU) appropriated to produce 1 kg of animal-source food (ASF) over the amount of HDP in that 1 kg of ASF. The CWU for livestock production is first categorized according to the land over which it is consumed, based on the suitability of that land to produce food crops. Then, the method assesses food-feed competition by determining the amount of HDP that could have been produced from food crops, using the same CWU currently used to produce ASF. The method enables identification of livestock production systems that contribute to global food supply without competing significantly over water resources with food production, based on their CWU. Three beef production systems in Uruguay are used to illustrate the method. During the backgrounding and the finishing stages, which are analyzed in this study, cattle can be kept on natural pasture (NP), seeded pasture (SP) or in feedlots (FL). The following three systems were analysed: i) NP-NP, ii) SP-SP and iii) SP-FL. Results show that the NP-NP system uses the largest amount of water per kg of beef output. However, results also show that the SP-SP and SP-FL systems can potentially produce more HDP by growing food crops than by producing beef. Based on the traditional measure for water productivity, i.e. the quantity of CWU per kilo of beef produced, we would conclude that the NP-NP system is least efficient, whereas based on the WUR the NP-NP system is the only system producing HDP more efficiently than food crops. Sustainable intensification not only implies improving agriculture and livestock productivity per unit of resource used, but also improving the number of human beings nourished. Results from this study illustrate the importance of considering competition and trade-offs with other uses when evaluating water use efficiency of livestock systems to promote sustainable intensification.
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spelling CGSpace809532024-05-01T08:20:06Z Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed? Ran, Ylva Middelaar, Corina E.M. van Lannerstad, Mats Herrero, Mario Boer, Imke J.M. de livestock water Current approaches to estimate freshwater use in livestock production systems generally fail to consider the competition for water resources with alternative uses, such as production of food crops food or other ecosystem services. This article presents a new method to account for the competition for freshwater use between food crops and animal feed, while assessing freshwater use in livestock production systems. The developed water use ratio (WUR) is defined as the maximum amount of human digestible protein (HDP) derived from food crops from the consumptive water use (CWU) appropriated to produce 1 kg of animal-source food (ASF) over the amount of HDP in that 1 kg of ASF. The CWU for livestock production is first categorized according to the land over which it is consumed, based on the suitability of that land to produce food crops. Then, the method assesses food-feed competition by determining the amount of HDP that could have been produced from food crops, using the same CWU currently used to produce ASF. The method enables identification of livestock production systems that contribute to global food supply without competing significantly over water resources with food production, based on their CWU. Three beef production systems in Uruguay are used to illustrate the method. During the backgrounding and the finishing stages, which are analyzed in this study, cattle can be kept on natural pasture (NP), seeded pasture (SP) or in feedlots (FL). The following three systems were analysed: i) NP-NP, ii) SP-SP and iii) SP-FL. Results show that the NP-NP system uses the largest amount of water per kg of beef output. However, results also show that the SP-SP and SP-FL systems can potentially produce more HDP by growing food crops than by producing beef. Based on the traditional measure for water productivity, i.e. the quantity of CWU per kilo of beef produced, we would conclude that the NP-NP system is least efficient, whereas based on the WUR the NP-NP system is the only system producing HDP more efficiently than food crops. Sustainable intensification not only implies improving agriculture and livestock productivity per unit of resource used, but also improving the number of human beings nourished. Results from this study illustrate the importance of considering competition and trade-offs with other uses when evaluating water use efficiency of livestock systems to promote sustainable intensification. 2017-07 2017-05-11T12:33:51Z 2017-05-11T12:33:51Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80953 en Limited Access Elsevier Ran, Y., Middelaar, C.E. van, Lannerstad, M., Herrero, M. and Boer, I.J.M. de. 2017. Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed? Agricultural Systems 155:1-8.
spellingShingle livestock
water
Ran, Ylva
Middelaar, Corina E.M. van
Lannerstad, Mats
Herrero, Mario
Boer, Imke J.M. de
Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed?
title Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed?
title_full Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed?
title_fullStr Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed?
title_full_unstemmed Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed?
title_short Freshwater use in livestock production—To be used for food crops or livestock feed?
title_sort freshwater use in livestock production to be used for food crops or livestock feed
topic livestock
water
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80953
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AT middelaarcorinaemvan freshwateruseinlivestockproductiontobeusedforfoodcropsorlivestockfeed
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AT herreromario freshwateruseinlivestockproductiontobeusedforfoodcropsorlivestockfeed
AT boerimkejmde freshwateruseinlivestockproductiontobeusedforfoodcropsorlivestockfeed