Cattle are being bred with genes from their
African cousins that are accustomed to hot weather.
New corn varieties are emerging with larger
roots for gathering water in a drought. Someday, the plants may even be able to
"resurrect" themselves after a long dry spell, recovering quickly
when rain returns.
Across American agriculture, farmers and crop
scientists have concluded it's too late to fight climate change. They need to
adapt to it with a new generation of hardier animals and plants specially
engineered to survive, and even thrive, in intense heat, with little rain.
"The single-largest limitation for
agriculture worldwide is drought," said Andrew Wood, a professor of plant
physiology and molecular biology at Southern Illinois University.
On his Kansas farm, Clay Scott is testing a
new kind of corn called Droughtguard as his region suffers through a second
consecutive growing season with painfully scarce precipitation.
"These are products I really need,"
Mr. Scott said. "I couldn't be any happier that they are working on these
products."
The urgency is also evident in Texas, where
rainfall has been below normal since 1996. Crops and pastures were decimated in
2011 by a searing drought, and some got hit again this year. Ranchers have sold
off many animals they couldn't graze or afford to feed. Cattle inventory, at
97.8 million head as of July 1, is the smallest since the U.S. Department of
Agriculture began a July count in 1973.
At least one rancher is breeding cattle with
genes that trace to animals from Africa and India, where their ancestors
developed natural tolerance to heat and drought.
Ron Gill, a rancher who also heads the animal
science department at Texas A&M University, said research has been under
way for years to develop cattle that can withstand heat and grow on
lower-quality forage.
Last year, he started incorporating into his
herd Beefmaster cattle, a cross between Brahman cattle, which originated in
India, and European breeds that include Herefords and Shorthorns. He's also
experimenting with the appropriately named Hotlanders, a Texas breed developed
for its heat tolerance using genetics from Senepol cows bred in the Virgin
Islands.
It's no different for farmers in the nation's
Corn Belt, who are confronting a drought that stretches from Ohio west to
California and from Texas north to the Dakotas. Only in the 1930s and the 1950s
has a drought covered more of the United States, according to the National
Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C.
Nearly half of the nation's corn crop is in
poor or very poor condition, as well as a third of soybeans.
The damage would be much worse without the crop
science advancements of the last 40 years, said Mr. Wood, the Southern Illinois
professor.
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