The impacts of increased heat stress events on wheat yield under climate change in China

被引:1
|
作者
Xuan Yang
Zhan Tian
Laixiang Sun
Baode Chen
Francesco N. Tubiello
Yinlong Xu
机构
[1] National Meteorological Centre of China Meteorological Administration,Department of Geographical Sciences
[2] Shanghai Typhoon Institute of China Meteorological Administration,School of Finance & Management, SOAS
[3] Shanghai Climate Center,Statistics Division
[4] Shanghai Key Laboratory of Meteorology and Health,Institute of Agro
[5] Shanghai Meteorological Service,Environment and Sustainable Development
[6] University of Maryland,undefined
[7] International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA),undefined
[8] University of London,undefined
[9] Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO),undefined
[10] Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences,undefined
来源
Climatic Change | 2017年 / 140卷
关键词
Heat Stress; Winter Wheat; Spring Wheat; Wheat Yield; Generalize Likelihood Uncertainty Estimation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
China is the largest wheat-producing country in the world. Wheat is one of the two major staple cereals consumed in the country and about 60% of Chinese population eats the grain daily. To safeguard the production of this important crop, about 85% of wheat areas in the country are under irrigation or high rainfall conditions. However, wheat production in the future will be challenged by the increasing occurrence and magnitude of adverse and extreme weather events. In this paper, we present an analysis that combines outputs from a wide range of General Circulation Models (GCMs) with observational data to produce more detailed projections of local climate suitable for assessing the impact of increasing heat stress events on wheat yield. We run the assessment at 36 representative sites in China using the crop growth model CSM-CropSim Wheat of DSSAT 4.5. The simulations based on historical data show that this model is suitable for quantifying yield damages caused by heat stress. In comparison with the observations of baseline 1996–2005, our simulations for the future indicate that by 2100 the projected increases in heat stress would lead to an ensemble-mean yield reduction of −7.1% (with a probability of 80%) and −17.5% (with a probability of 96%) for winter wheat and spring wheat, respectively, under the irrigated condition. Although such losses can be fully compensated by CO2 fertilization effect as parameterized in DSSAT 4.5, a great caution is needed in interpreting this fertilization effect because existing crop dynamic models are unable to incorporate the effect of CO2 acclimation (the growth-enhancing effect decreases over time) and other offsetting forces.
引用
收藏
页码:605 / 620
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Soil Tillage Systems and Wheat Yield under Climate Change Scenarios
    Servadio, Pieranna
    Bergonzoli, Simone
    Beni, Claudio
    [J]. AGRONOMY-BASEL, 2016, 6 (03):
  • [42] Climate change and Australian wheat yield
    Neville Nicholls
    [J]. Nature, 1998, 391 : 449 - 449
  • [43] Climate change and Australian wheat yield
    Roger Gifford
    John Angus
    Damian Barrett
    John Passioura
    Howard Rawson
    Richard Richards
    Maarten Stapper
    Jeff Wood
    [J]. Nature, 1998, 391 : 448 - 449
  • [44] Climate change and Australian wheat yield
    Godden, D
    Batterham, R
    Drynan, R
    [J]. NATURE, 1998, 391 (6666) : 447 - 448
  • [45] Climate change and Australian wheat yield
    David Godden
    Robert Batterham
    Ross Drynan
    [J]. Nature, 1998, 391 : 447 - 448
  • [46] Resilience of Grain Yield in China Under Climate Change Scenarios
    Chou, Jieming
    Sun, Mingyang
    Xu, Yuan
    Yang, Fan
    Li, Jiangnan
    Zhao, Weixing
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2021, 9
  • [47] Effects of drought on maize yield under climate change in China
    Xu K.
    Zhu X.
    Liu Y.
    Guo R.
    Chen L.
    [J]. Zhu, Xiufang (zhuxiufang@bnu.edu.cn), 1600, Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering (36): : 149 - 158
  • [48] The Impacts of Climate Change on the Irrigation Water Demand, Grain Yield, and Biomass Yield of Wheat Crop in Nepal
    Kaini, Santosh
    Harrison, Matthew Tom
    Gardner, Ted
    Nepal, Santosh
    Sharma, Ashok K.
    [J]. WATER, 2022, 14 (17)
  • [49] Climate change impacts on regional winter wheat production in main wheat production regions of China
    Lv, Zunfu
    Liu, Xiaojun
    Cao, Weixing
    Zhu, Yan
    [J]. AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2013, 171 : 234 - 248
  • [50] Increased occurrence of high impact compound events under climate change
    Ridder, N. N.
    Ukkola, A. M.
    Pitman, A. J.
    Perkins-Kirkpatrick, S. E.
    [J]. NPJ CLIMATE AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE, 2022, 5 (01)