4.7 Article

Over-Optimistic Projected Future Wheat Yield Potential in the North China Plain: The Role of Future Climate Extremes

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12010145

Keywords

APSIM-wheat model; climate change; wheat yield; frost and heat; drought stress

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [31871578, 32172108]
  2. National Key Research & Development Program of China during the 13th Five-year Period [2016YFD0300107]
  3. Engineering Research Center of Ecology and Agricultural Use of Wetland [KFT202102]

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Global warming and altered precipitation patterns pose a serious threat to crop production in the North China Plain. This study evaluated the effects of heat and frost stress on sensitive phenological stages of wheat and found that future yield projections may be overestimated. Clustering of drought stress patterns revealed potential alleviation of moderate drought stress in the future but similar frequency of severe drought stress.
Global warming and altered precipitation patterns pose a serious threat to crop production in the North China Plain (NCP). Quantifying the frequency of adverse climate events (e.g., frost, heat and drought) under future climates and assessing how those climatic extreme events would affect yield are important to effectively inform and make science-based adaptation options for agriculture in a changing climate. In this study, we evaluated the effects of heat and frost stress during sensitive phenological stages at four representative sites in the NCP using the APSIM-wheat model. climate data included historical and future climates, the latter being informed by projections from 22 Global Climate Models (GCMs) in the Coupled Model Inter-comparison Project phase 6 (CMIP6) for the period 2031-2060 (2050s). Our results show that current projections of future wheat yield potential in the North China Plain may be overestimated; after more accurately accounting for the effects of frost and heat stress in the model, yield projections for 2031-60 decreased from 31% to 9%. Clustering of common drought-stress seasonal patterns into key groups revealed that moderate drought stress environments are likely to be alleviated in the future, although the frequency of severe drought-stress environments would remain similar (25%) to that occurring under the current climate. We highlight the importance of mechanistically accounting for temperature stress on crop physiology, enabling more robust projections of crop yields under future the burgeoning climate crisis.

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