4.7 Article

Anticipating the Climate Change Impacts on Madeira's Agriculture: The Characterization and Monitoring of a Vine Agrosystem

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12092201

Keywords

model; agrosystem indicators; productivity; sustainability; agrodiversity

Funding

  1. Programa Operacional Madeira 14-20
  2. European Union through the European Regional Development Fund [M1420-01-0145FEDER-000011]
  3. Agencia Regional para o Desenvolvimento da Investigacao, Tecnologia e Inovacao
  4. European Union through the European Social Fund [M1420-09-5369-FSE000002]
  5. Portugal 2020

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Climate-Madeira Strategy (CMS) predicts climate scenarios for the Madeira region in 2050 and 2070, including an increase in average temperature and a decrease in precipitation. This study establishes a baseline for a typical agricultural system in Madeira and investigates the impacts of climate change on its components and productivity.
Climate-Madeira Strategy (CMS) foresees two models to describe the climate scenarios for the Madeira region in 2050 and 2070. These scenarios anticipate an average temperature rise of 1.4 to 3.7 degrees C and a decrease in precipitation by 30 to 40%. Consequently, Madeira's agriculture will suffer the impacts of climate change. To understand these impacts, a baseline of major agrosystem components needs to be established, with the ultimate goal to monitor its consequences in its functioning. CASBio project used the 1961-1991 and 2010-2020 meteorological data series to modulate climate conditions and characterize and monitor six agrosystems for 2 years. One of them was a vineyard, Ouinta das Vinhas, representing a typical agrosystem in the Mediterranean climate. The annual and seasonal variation in climatic parameters, soil conditions, microbiological communities, floristic and insect diversity, and crop production was assessed, using a total of 50 parameters. The results were used to establish a baseline of the agrosystem components and their seasonal and annual variation. The major findings are: (i) winter and summer extreme events show a trend in temperature and precipitation supporting a fast change in climate; (ii) a critical imbalance between nitrogenfixing and denitrifying bacteria was identified, especially in summer, that could be determined by the rise in temperature and drought; (iii) among floristic diversity, the therophytes and geophytes confirm to be the most suitable indicators for the rise in temperature and reduction in precipitation in the agrosystems; (iv) an imbalance in favor of C. capitata plague was observed, associated with the summer rise in temperature and decrease in precipitation; (v) despite an increase in most of the grape varieties production, the Madeiran wine local varieties were shown to be less stable in productivity under observed climate conditions. The agrosystem baseline is a starting point for longterm monitoring and allows for further quantifying the influence of climate change on agrosystem productivity, resilience, and sustainability.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available