Plenary Session

Big Ten, Wednesday, 08:30

KEYNOTE

Mariana Rufino
Chair of Livestock Systems, Technical University of Munich, Germany

Smart Grazing: digital tech and models to improve the sustainability of livestock

Grazing is important for the welfare of ruminant livestock and poor grazing can affect soil carbon storage. Hot grazing conditions could cause heat stress and stressed animals produce less and emit greenhouse gases (GHG). Understanding all these dimensions is a challenge for the livestock sector. Can digital tech improve the sustainability of livestock production, reducing the environmental impact of dairy and meat? What is the role of digital tech helping livestock-dependent communities to improve their livelihoods by protecting livestock from the impacts of climate change? These are key questions science needs to explore and an opportunity to find solutions with models and new sensors and digital tools.

Mariana Rufino is an experienced agricultural systems analyst, with extensive modelling experience having conducted studies across scales, from agricultural fields to whole landscapes. Her research combines experiments and modelling, sensors and digital tech to understand key constraints to primary productivity and to test hypotheses of ecosystem functioning under climate change. She collaborates with several research institutions in Africa, Latin America and Europe. In the last 15 years, her focus has been developing the scientific evidence to reduce GHG emissions from the livestock sector, increasing resilience of mixed crop-livestock systems by managing grazing, choosing alternative feeds and protecting biodiversity.

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