Pathways to climate resilience: Adaptation of dairy farm systems in response to climate changes
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33584/jnzg.2025.87.3805Abstract
Changes in climate across New Zealand (NZ) require ongoing adaptation strategies for pasture-based dairy farmers to remain productive, resilient and economically viable. In this study we explored strategies that NZ dairy farmers are using to adapt their systems to changes in regional climate. This research used a qualitative semistructured interviews to conduct case study research on seven dairy farms throughout NZ. The case study
farmers noted more variable regional climate with changes such as warmer winters with less frosts, more frequent and serious flooding events, longer dry periods interspersed with more intense rainfall events, heat in summer, and increased wind intensity during storms. They used a range of adaptation strategies in response to regional climate changes. These strategies can be classified as a) enhancing system robustness through
lowering stocking rates to increase feed buffers, b) increased adaptability through greater responsiveness to significant events such as floods, or c) transformative change such as moving to whole season once-a-day milking or investing in housing infrastructure. The case studies highlight that farmers already need support from agricultural research, extension and policy to increase their adaptive capacity to more variable and extreme weather; this is now a current, rather than future, issue.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Rights granted to the New Zealand Grassland Association through this agreement are non-exclusive. You are free to publish the work(s) elsewhere and no ownership is assumed by the NZGA when storing or curating an electronic version of the work(s). The author(s) will receive no monetary return from the Association for the use of material contained in the manuscript. If I am one of several co-authors, I hereby confirm that I am authorized by my co-authors to grant this Licence as their agent on their behalf. For the avoidance of doubt, this includes the rights to supply the article in electronic and online forms and systems.

