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Global Response Patterns of Major Rainfed Crops to Adaptation by Maintaining Current Growing Periods and Irrigation

Authors :
Sara Minoli
Christoph Müller
Joshua Elliott
Alex C. Ruane
Jonas Jägermeyr
Florian Zabel
Marie Dury
Christian Folberth
Louis François
Tobias Hank
Ingrid Jacquemin
Wenfeng Liu
Stefan Olin
Thomas A. M. Pugh
Source :
Earth's Future, Vol 7, Iss 12, Pp 1464-1480 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Abstract Increasing temperature trends are expected to impact yields of major field crops by affecting various plant processes, such as phenology, growth, and evapotranspiration. However, future projections typically do not consider the effects of agronomic adaptation in farming practices. We use an ensemble of seven Global Gridded Crop Models to quantify the impacts and adaptation potential of field crops under increasing temperature up to 6 K, accounting for model uncertainty. We find that without adaptation, the dominant effect of temperature increase is to shorten the growing period and to reduce grain yields and production. We then test the potential of two agronomic measures to combat warming‐induced yield reduction: (i) use of cultivars with adjusted phenology to regain the reference growing period duration and (ii) conversion of rainfed systems to irrigated ones in order to alleviate the negative temperature effects that are mediated by crop evapotranspiration. We find that cultivar adaptation can fully compensate global production losses up to 2 K of temperature increase, with larger potentials in continental and temperate regions. Irrigation could also compensate production losses, but its potential is highest in arid regions, where irrigation expansion would be constrained by water scarcity. Moreover, we discuss that irrigation is not a true adaptation measure but rather an intensification strategy, as it equally increases production under any temperature level. In the tropics, even when introducing both adapted cultivars and irrigation, crop production declines already at moderate warming, making adaptation particularly challenging in these areas.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23284277
Volume :
7
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Earth's Future
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.83f13dfbe60e4b8e9001d7155d71ea1f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2018EF001130