 
          Page 46   October 27, 2015
        
        
          
            2015 Logan County Farm Outlook Magazine
          
        
        
          LINCOLN DAILY NEWS.COM
        
        
          are still being studied.”  He says, “The influence
        
        
          of human activity has played a role. However,
        
        
          it is important to remember that our atmosphere
        
        
          is highly complex, so other factors need to be
        
        
          analyzed.”
        
        
          According to a Scientific American article “U.S.
        
        
          Farmers View Climate Change as Just Another
        
        
          Weather Challenge,” farmers have become
        
        
          accustomed to bad weather that includes both
        
        
          drought and torrential rains, and many “don’t
        
        
          think humanity is to blame for the long-term
        
        
          shifts in weather patterns known as climate
        
        
          change.”  They are likely to view climate change
        
        
          as something that has always occurred as a part of
        
        
          natural weather patterns
        
        
          No matter what the cause is, the general consensus
        
        
          among many scientific societies is that the planet
        
        
          has become warmer in the past century.
        
        
          Miller says, “Data from the past century points
        
        
          to significant warming at the high latitudes of
        
        
          the Arctic, North America, Asia and Europe.
        
        
          However, we have seen very little warming
        
        
          in the Midwestern and Southern U.S. over the
        
        
          past century,” though he does note that “in the
        
        
          Midwest we have experienced slightly warmer
        
        
          temperatures from late Winter through the Spring
        
        
          during the past 100 years.” Miller says that when
        
        
          we just analyze a century of data, “there are a lot
        
        
          of assumptions being made.”
        
        
          For people who believe humans influence
        
        
          climate change, agriculture is seen as one cause
        
        
          of the increase in greenhouse gases with “CO2
        
        
          emissions linked to deforestation in temperate
        
        
          regions: where forests and woodlands are cleared
        
        
          to make room for fields and pastures, . . [m]ethane
        
        
          emissions from rice cultivations and enteric
        
        
          fermentation in cattle. . . and [n]itrous oxide
        
        
          emissions from fertilizer applications” according
        
        
          to the Climate Institute.
        
        
          According to Monsanto, agriculture is one of
        
        
          the first areas to be affected by changes in our
        
        
          environment. Rising temperatures, extreme
        
        
          weather, and drought are just a few of the issues
        
        
          agriculture must deal with in order to feed
        
        
          mankind.  The company asserts,  “Some effects
        
        
          of agriculture—such as the greenhouse gases
        
        
          produced by farm machinery and the production
        
        
          of fertilizer—are contributing factors. And of
        
        
          course, agriculture itself can suffer from the
        
        
          effects of climate change.”  Other thoughts are
        
        
          that “Agriculture needs to adapt to changing
        
        
          conditions and use farming techniques that reduce
        
        
          the impact of our changing climate.”
        
        
          Studies by the University of Illinois College
        
        
          of Agriculture, Consumer, and Environmental
        
        
          Sciences indicate that climate change may
        
        
          adversely affect farming, such as a fungus that
        
        
          causes charcoal rot.   ACES Molecular biologist
        
        
          Osman Radwan postulates, “As the climate
        
        
          continues to change and we see more extremes in
        
        
          Continued