4.7 Article

Trend and uncertainty analysis of simulated climate change impacts with multiple GCMs and emission scenarios

Journal

AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
Volume 151, Issue 10, Pages 1297-1304

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2011.05.010

Keywords

Climate change; Impact assessment; Soil erosion; Soil hydrology; Wheat production

Funding

  1. Outstanding Overseas Chinese Scholars Fund of Chinese Academy of Sciences [2005-2-3]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40640420061]

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Trends and uncertainty of the climate change impacts on hydrology, soil erosion, and wheat production during 2010-2039 at El Reno in central Oklahoma, USA, were evaluated for 12 climate change scenarios projected by four GCMs (CCSR/NIES, CGCM2, CSIRO-Mk2, and HadCM3) under three emissions scenarios (A2, B2, and GGa). Compared with the present climate, overall t-tests (n = 12) show that it is almost certain that mean precipitation will decline by some 6% (>98.5% probability), daily precipitation variance increase by 12% (>99%), and maximum and minimum temperature increase by 1.46 and 1.26 degrees C (>99%), respectively. Compared with the present climate under the same tillage systems, it is very likely (>90%) that evapotranpiration and long-term soil water storage will decease, but runoff and soil loss will increase despite the projected declines in precipitation. There will be no significant changes in wheat grain yield. Paired t-tests show that daily precipitation variance projected under GGa is greater than those under A2 and B2 (P = 0.1), resulting in greater runoff and soil loss under GGa (P = 0.1). HadCM3 projected greater mean annual precipitation than CGCM2 and CSIRO (P = 0.1). Consequently, greater runoff, grain yield, transpiration, soil evaporation, and soil water storage were simulated for HadCM3 (P = 0.1). The inconsistency among GCMs and differential impact responses between emission scenarios underscore the necessity of using multi-GCMs and multi-emission scenarios for impact assessments. Overall results show that no-till and conservation tillage systems will need to be adopted for better soil and water conservation and environmental protection in the region during the next several decades. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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