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Journal Article

Impact Assessment of Livestock Production on Water Scarcity in a Watershed in Southern Brazil

Authors

Carra,  Sofia Helena Zanella
External Organizations;

Drastig,  Katrin
External Organizations;

Palhares,  Julio Cesar Pascale
External Organizations;

Bortolin,  Taison Anderson
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Hagen.Koch

Koch,  Hagen
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Schneider,  Vania Elisabete
External Organizations;

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Fulltext (public)

water-15-03955-v2.pdf
(Publisher version), 9MB

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There is no public supplementary material available
Citation

Carra, S. H. Z., Drastig, K., Palhares, J. C. P., Bortolin, T. A., Koch, H., Schneider, V. E. (2023): Impact Assessment of Livestock Production on Water Scarcity in a Watershed in Southern Brazil. - Water, 15, 22, 3955.
https://doi.org/10.3390/w15223955


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_29283
Abstract
This study presents the assessment of water scarcity associated with livestock production in a watershed in Southern Brazil where 115 farms (poultry, pig, and milk) are located. The methods, AWARE—available water remaining, and BWSI—blue water scarcity index, were applied monthly for the year 2018, and the characterization factors (CF) were regionalized into five scenarios evaluated by varying water availability and environmental water requirements. Livestock water consumption accounted for 94.1% of the total water consumed. Low water scarcity was observed in all scenarios (BWSI < 0). The highest CFAWARE was observed in scenario 3, ranging from 2.15 to 9.70 m3 world eq.m3, with higher water scarcity in summer. In the same scenario, pig production presented the highest annual average water scarcity footprint (WSF) of 90.3 m3 world eq./t carcass weight. Among milk production systems, pasture-based systems presented the highest annual average WSF of 52.7 m3 world eq./t fat protein corrected milk, surpassing semi-confined and confined systems by 12.4% and 3.5%, respectively. In scenario 3, poultry production presented an annual average WSF of 49.3 m3 world eq./t carcass weight. This study contributes knowledge to the livestock sector to perform the assessment of water scarcity.