4.8 Article

Decline in climate resilience of European wheat

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1804387115

Keywords

wheat; cultivar; Europe; climate resilience; response diversity

Funding

  1. Joint Programming Initiative for Agriculture, Climate Change and Food Security (FACCE) through the project Modelling European Agriculture with Climate Change for Food Security (MACSUR)
  2. Innovation Fund Denmark
  3. Belgian Science Policy Belspo Contract [SD/RI/03A]
  4. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVV-15-0489]
  5. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [031B0039C]
  6. Italian Ministry for Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies [24064/7303/15]
  7. French National Institute for Agricultural Research through the metaprogram Adaptation of Agriculture and Forests to Climate Change (AAFCC)
  8. Spanish National Institute for Agricultural and Food Research and Technology
  9. Agencia Estatal de Investigacion Grant [MACSUR02-APCIN2016-0005-00-00]
  10. Czech Adaptation Strategies for Sustainable Ecosystem Services and Food Security under Adverse Environmental Conditions project (SustES) [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000797]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Food security relies on the resilience of staple food crops to climatic variability and extremes, but the climate resilience of European wheat is unknown. A diversity of responses to disturbance is considered a key determinant of resilience. The capacity of a sole crop genotype to perform well under climatic variability is limited; therefore, a set of cultivars with diverse responses to weather conditions critical to crop yield is required. Here, we show a decline in the response diversity of wheat in farmers' fields in most European countries after 2002-2009 based on 101,000 cultivar yield observations. Similar responses to weather were identified in cultivar trials among central European countries and southern European countries. A response diversity hotspot appeared in the trials in Slovakia, while response diversity deserts were identified in Czechia and Germany and for durum wheat in southern Europe. Positive responses to abundant precipitation were lacking. This assessment suggests that current breeding programs and cultivar selection practices do not sufficiently prepare for climatic uncertainty and variability. Consequently, the demand for climate resilience of staple food crops such as wheat must be better articulated. Assessments and communication of response diversity enable collective learning across supply chains. Increased awareness could foster governance of resilience through research and breeding programs, incentives, and regulation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available