Abstract
The development of animal husbandry in China is facing enormous pressure from increasing demand of meat consumption, climate change, degrading grassland, and changing national policies. This paper presents the latest findings from an anthropological field investigation interviewing local herders, traders, and local officials from farming–pastoral ecotone in Inner Mongolia and shed lights on how locals have adapted their lives to climate change and the new national husbandry policies of the twenty-first century. Based on the anthropological interviews, we discussed the future opportunities and challenges of animal husbandry development in farming–pastoral ecotone. Results suggested that national ecological conservation policies and meat price have much larger impacts on animal husbandry than climate change, as perceived by locals. Family Fencing Policy, a relatively new policy aiming to avoid overgrazing and restore vegetation, was neither well accepted nor well implemented by the local herders. This is partially explained by the poor fencing technology, insufficient support facilities, as well as the high costs and low-profit margins in the animal husbandry. We conclude by suggesting that pastoralism in Northern China may greatly benefit from the development of rural cooperatives and active participation of locals in policy designing and implementation.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Ao R, Hu. E (2007) Assessment of grassland grazing system development and mode chosing in Inner Mongolia. Inner Mong Soc Sci 28:90–92
Gao A, Zhao H (2010) Discussion on the impact of grazing and feeding on the production ability of the centre-half goat Gansu. Anim Vet Sci 4:9–13
Gavrilescu M, Demnerova K, Aamand J, Agathos S, Fava F (2015) Emerging pollutants in the environment: present and future challenges in biomonitoring, ecological risks and bioremediation. New Biotechnol 32:147–156
Harper C (2015) Environment and society. Routledge, Abingdon
Hua L, Squires VR (2015) Managing China’s pastoral lands: current problems and future prospects. Land Use Policy 43:129–137
Larsen J (2012) Meat Consumption in China Now Double That in the United States. Earth Policy Institute, Washington, DC
Lei YD, Wang JA, Luo LL (2011) Drought risk assessment of China’s mid-season paddy. Int J Disaster Risk Sci 2:32–40. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13753-011-0009-4
Li Z, Bao Y, Zhang J, Wang H, Hu Z (2015) Comparative analysis on degradation and its driving factors in Xilin Gol grassland and Hulun Buir Grassland. J Dailian Nationalities Univ 17:1–5
Liang F, Tang H (2009) Impact of climate change on the agriculture and animal husbandry productivity in Wulanhaote and its strategy. Inner Mong Sci Technol Econ 6:60–61
Liu R (2010) Under the Grain for green project, banning grazing, rest grazing and rotation grazing to recover the grassland ecosystem. Inner Mong Prataculture 22:14–17
Liu S (2013) The advantage and measures of developing the grassalnd feeding animal husbandry. Chin Agric Inf 9:110
Miao L, Fraser R, Sun Z, Sneath D, He B, Cui X (2015a) Climate impact on vegetation and animal husbandry on the Mongolian plateau: a comparative analysis. Nat Hazards 80:727–739. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11069-015-1992-3
Miao L, Moore JC, Zeng F, Lei J, Ding J, He B, Cui X (2015b) Footprint of research in desertification management in China. Land Degrad Dev 26:450–457. https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.2399
Miao L, Ye P, He B, Chen L, Cui X (2015c) Future climate impact on the desertification in the dry land Asia using AVHRR GIMMS NDVI3g data. Remote Sens 7:3863–3877
Mu S, Li J, Yang H, Gang C, Chen Y (2013) Spatio-temporal variation analysis of grassland net primary productivity and its relationship with climate over the past 10 years in Inner Mongolia. Acta Prataculturae Sinica 22:6–15
Wang J (2012) Developing features of foreign animal husbandry and the choose of animal husbandry developing mode in China. Word Agric 10:32–35
Williams DM (2002) Beyond great walls: environment, identity, and development on the Chinese grasslands of Inner Mongolia. Stanford University Press, Stanford
Wu G, Du G, Liu Z, Thirgood S (2009) Effect of fencing and grazing on a Kobresia-dominated meadow in the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau. Plant Soil 319:115–126
Xu YC, Zhang YQ, Gao LP, Qiao GH, Chen JQ (2015) To fence or not to fence? Perceptions and attitudes of herders in Inner Mongolia. Build Resil Mong Rangel, Mongolia, 9–10 June 2015
Yan Y, Tang H (2007) Effects of exclosure on typical steppe community properties in Inner Mongolia. Acta Botanica Boreali- Occidentalia Sinica 27:1225–1232
Zhang L (2013) Economic status, problems and developing strategies of animal husbandry in Inner Mongolia. Anim Husb Feed Sci 34:78–79
Acknowledgements
The work was financially supported by the Key Project of National Social and Scientific Fund Program (16ZDA047), National Key Research and Development Program of China (2017YFC0504301), the European Union’s framework programme of research and innovation horizon 2020 (2014–2020) under the Marie Skłodowska Curie Agreement (795179), Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Startup Foundation for Introducing Talents of Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology (2243141601048), National Basic Research Development Program of China (2015CB953602, 2016YFA0602500), and the National Science Foundation of China (91637104, 41661144006).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding authors
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Miao, L., Sun, Z., Cui, X. et al. Wake up “boiling frogs”: a study on animal husbandry under climate change in Northern China. Environ Earth Sci 77, 466 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12665-018-7639-4
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12665-018-7639-4