4.7 Article

Heat and Drought Stress Advanced Global Wheat Harvest Timing from 1981-2014

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs11080971

Keywords

wheat phenology; spatiotemporal pattern; climate change; growing degree days; water deficit

Funding

  1. National High-Resolution Earth Observation Project [11-Y20A16-9001-17/18]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation [41771371]

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Studying wheat phenology can greatly enhance our understanding of how wheat growth responds to climate change, and guide us to reasonably confront its influence. However, comprehensive global-scale wheat phenology-climate analysis is still lacking. In this study, we extracted the wheat harvest date (WHD) from 1981-2014 from satellite data using threshold-, logistic-, and shape-based methods. Then, we analyzed the effects of heat and drought stress on WHD based on gridded daily temperature and monthly drought data (the Palmer drought severity index (PDSI) and the standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index (SPEI)) over global wheat-growing areas. The results show that WHD was generally delayed from the low to mid latitudes. With respect to variation trends, we detected a significant advancement of WHD in 32.1% of the world's wheat-growing areas since 1981, with an average changing rate of -0.25 days/yr. A significant negative correlation was identified between WHD and the prior three months' normal-growing-degree-days across 50.4% of the study region, which implies that greater preseason effective temperature accumulation may cause WHD to occur earlier. Meanwhile, WHD was also found to be significantly and negatively correlated with the prior three months' extreme-growing-degree-days across only 9.6% of the study region (mainly located in northern South Asia and north Central-West Asia). The effects of extreme heat stress were weaker than those of normal thermal conditions. When extreme drought (measured by PDSI/SPEI) occurred in the current month, in the month prior to WHD, and in the second month prior to WHD, it forced WHD to advance by about 9.0/8.1 days, 13.8/12.2 days, and 10.8/5.3 days compared to normal conditions, respectively. In conclusion, we highlight the effects that heat and drought stress have on advancing wheat harvest timing, which should be a research focus under future climate change.

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