Department of Pathobiology, University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine, 2001 S Lincoln Ave, Urbana, IL 61802, United States.
Prev Vet Med. 2020 Nov;184:105158. doi: 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2020.105158. Epub 2020 Sep 28.
Increasing uncertainty and variability in weather due to climate change puts enormous stress on the sustainability of agricultural communities in several parts of the continental United States. Rural agriculture-based communities, such as those in North Carolina, Nebraska, and Illinois are particularly vulnerable to the impacts of flooding. These extreme weather events affect many animal facilities, and flooding can cause long-term impacts on animal health and productivity.
This scoping review investigated the potential short- and long-term ramifications of flooding on beef cattle and swine farms with theoretical locations in the Midwestern U.S. The goal of this review is to create a concept map to identify research gaps related to efforts to support those animals and peoples ravaged by floods. This was accomplished by performing a scoping review using search terms "beef OR swine AND flood" to assess direct effects and then "beef OR swine AND direct effect" to evaluate secondary and tertiary effects.
Our findings were based on a total of 89 peer-reviewed publications, with 50 publications relating to beef cattle, 24 relating to swine, and 15 containing information applicable to both. On beef farms, the effects of flooding can be broad and long-lasting. The short-term risks of flooding are reasonably well-understood, including the comingling of unfamiliar cattle, nutritional restriction, and disease transmission. However, long-term impacts, including potential effects on reproduction, nutrition, and carcass quality, have been less studied. In particular, further research is needed on mold species that contaminate hay post-flood, the effect of moldy hay ingestion on cattle, and the effects of heavy metal consumption on cattle and consumers. Little research is available regarding the effects of flooding on swine farms, likely due to the highly intensive nature of swine operations. In general, swine farms suffer from acute infectious diseases and biosecurity risks after flooding events.
The potential ramifications of flooding on livestock farms differ among farm operations. Beef farms should prepare for long-term impacts on nutrition and reproduction, while swine farms should prepare for short-term impacts on biosecurity.
由于气候变化导致的天气不确定性和可变性增加,使美国大陆部分地区的农业社区的可持续性面临巨大压力。以农业为基础的农村社区,如北卡罗来纳州、内布拉斯加州和伊利诺伊州的社区,特别容易受到洪水的影响。这些极端天气事件影响了许多动物设施,洪水会对动物的健康和生产力造成长期影响。
本范围综述调查了美国中西部理论上的肉牛和养猪场洪水的短期和长期影响。本综述的目的是创建一个概念图,以确定与支持那些遭受洪水蹂躏的动物和人民的努力相关的研究空白。这是通过使用搜索词“beef OR swine AND flood”来评估直接影响,然后使用“beef OR swine AND direct effect”来评估二次和三次影响来进行范围综述来实现的。
我们的研究结果基于总共 89 篇同行评议出版物,其中 50 篇与肉牛有关,24 篇与猪有关,15 篇包含适用于两者的信息。在肉牛养殖场,洪水的影响可能广泛而持久。洪水的短期风险已经得到了很好的理解,包括不熟悉的牛的混合、营养限制和疾病传播。然而,长期影响,包括对繁殖、营养和胴体质量的潜在影响,研究较少。特别是,需要进一步研究洪水后污染干草的霉菌种类、霉菌干草摄入对牛的影响以及重金属摄入对牛和消费者的影响。关于洪水对养猪场的影响,研究很少,这可能是由于养猪场的高度集约化性质。一般来说,养猪场在洪水事件后会遭受急性传染病和生物安全风险。
洪水对农场运营的影响不同。肉牛养殖场应做好长期营养和繁殖影响的准备,而养猪场应做好短期生物安全影响的准备。