TY - CONF
T1 - Virtual farm website for dairy climate change and sustainability information
AU - Fabian-Wheeler, Eileen
AU - Hofstetter, Daniel
AU - Larson, Rebecca
AU - Aguirre-Villegas, Horacio
AU - Betz, Carolyn Rumery
N1 - Funding Information:
National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, under award number 2013-68002-20525. Appreciation to Mathew Ruark and Molly Jahn for their leadership on this Coordinated Agricultural Project, CAP. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Federal Appropriations under Project PEN04614 and Accession number 1011207. Many thanks to our University of Wisconsin-Madison based team who collaborated seamlessly with the Penn State team in working with the talented Creative Services group of professionals at WPSU who developed the site and its capabilities. Penn State WPSU Public Media took our concepts and vision that developed into the curriculum and web presence to best fit the many attributes needed to present this climate change and sustainability information.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - A website “virtual farm” dairy is the Extension dissemination piece for a USDA-funded project, the Dairy Coordinated Agricultural Project (CAP), which includes sustainability and climate change information from a variety of sources. The goal is to offer management practices relevant to sustainable dairies and the environment packaged into one accessible place. One unique aspect is the ability to interact with layers of information starting with the most basic of interest to the general public yet offering the ability to dig deeper through practical information to science-based articles, models and data. The landing page is an idealized layout depicting either a 150-cow or 1,500-cow modern dairy farm. Users browse the landing page to learn about basic features of dairy farms, and what impact they have on greenhouse gas emissions and climate change issues. Within deeper levels, details include herd management, manure management, cropping systems, water quality and the effect of changing weather patterns. Findings from computer process-based models are included for scenarios of dairy farms adopting mitigation and adaptation practices. The site also provides visitors access to data from dietary trials aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions where the cow manure was then stored and land applied for a complete cycle of air emission analysis. The site information incorporates a broad theme of sustainability targeted at farming operations in the Great Lakes region of the USA primarily through collaboration of University of Wisconsin-Madison, Penn State University, Cornell University and the Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy.
AB - A website “virtual farm” dairy is the Extension dissemination piece for a USDA-funded project, the Dairy Coordinated Agricultural Project (CAP), which includes sustainability and climate change information from a variety of sources. The goal is to offer management practices relevant to sustainable dairies and the environment packaged into one accessible place. One unique aspect is the ability to interact with layers of information starting with the most basic of interest to the general public yet offering the ability to dig deeper through practical information to science-based articles, models and data. The landing page is an idealized layout depicting either a 150-cow or 1,500-cow modern dairy farm. Users browse the landing page to learn about basic features of dairy farms, and what impact they have on greenhouse gas emissions and climate change issues. Within deeper levels, details include herd management, manure management, cropping systems, water quality and the effect of changing weather patterns. Findings from computer process-based models are included for scenarios of dairy farms adopting mitigation and adaptation practices. The site also provides visitors access to data from dietary trials aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions where the cow manure was then stored and land applied for a complete cycle of air emission analysis. The site information incorporates a broad theme of sustainability targeted at farming operations in the Great Lakes region of the USA primarily through collaboration of University of Wisconsin-Madison, Penn State University, Cornell University and the Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85084096103&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85084096103&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.13031/iles.ILES18-134
DO - 10.13031/iles.ILES18-134
M3 - Paper
AN - SCOPUS:85084096103
T2 - 10th International Livestock Environment Symposium, ILES 2018
Y2 - 25 September 2018 through 27 September 2018
ER -