Published July 4, 2025
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High-frequency data reveal limits of adaptation to heat in animal agriculture
- 1. University of Chicago
- 2. Hebrew University of Jerusalem
- 3. Israel Cattle Breeders Association
- 4. Tel Aviv University
Description
Understanding the impacts of climate change on food systems is a key research priority, but important sectors and the scope for adaptation remain underexplored. Here, we analyze more than 320 million daily observations of milk production across 12 years, paired with survey data, to provide estimates of the effect of humid heat and the scope for adaptation. Results indicate that extreme heat reduces milk yield by up to 10%, with effects that persist for more than 10 days. Effects are stronger when cows are at more productive stages, suggesting a productivity-resilience trade-off. Cooling infrastructure and management adjustments were widely adopted over the preceding two decades, but only partially mitigate these losses, reducing them by less than half. Given the technological advancement and the representation of the climate of key producing countries in our sample, these results suggest that adaptation strategies, even those at the technological frontier, may be insufficient to address climate change damages.
Data availability
All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. The milk production data used in this study are collected by the Israel Cattle Breeders Association (ICBA). Interested researchers may request access by contacting the ICBA at info@icba.org.il or yaniv@icba.org.il, by visiting www.icba.org.il, or by mail at North Industrial Park, P.O. Box 3015/20 Bareket, Caesarea 3088900, Israel.Files
sciadv.adw4780.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1126/sciadv.adw4780
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:16136
Funding
- US-Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund
- 5150-19
- Israel Dairy Board
- 118-0064-2022
- Council for Higher Education of Israel's PhD Sandwich Scholarship Program
- 2019