Soil quality both increases crop production and improves resilience to climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Lei Qiao
Xuhui Wang
Pete Smith
Jinlong Fan
Yuelai Lu
Bridget Emmett
Rong Li
Stephen Dorling
Haiqing Chen
Shaogui Liu
Tim G. Benton
Yaojun Wang
Yuqing Ma
Rongfeng Jiang
Fusuo Zhang
Shilong Piao
Christoph Mϋller
Huaqing Yang
Yanan Hao
Wangmei Li
Mingsheng Fan
机构
[1] China Agricultural University,College of Resources and Environmental Sciences
[2] China Agricultural University,National Academy of Agriculture Green Development
[3] Peking University,Sino
[4] University of Aberdeen,French Institute for Earth System Science, College of Urban and Environmental Science
[5] China Meteorological Administration,Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences
[6] University of East Anglia,National Satellite Meteorological Center
[7] Environment Centre Wales,School of International Development
[8] Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs of the People’s Republic of China,UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology
[9] University of East Anglia,Cultivated Land Quality Monitoring and Protection Center
[10] China Agricultural University,School of Environmental Sciences
[11] Yangzhou Station of Farmland Quality Protection,College of Land Science and Technology
[12] Chatham House,Royal Institute of International Affairs
[13] China Agricultural University,College of Information and Electrical Engineering
[14] Potsdam Institute for Climate Impacts Research,undefined
[15] Member of the Leibniz Association,undefined
来源
Nature Climate Change | 2022年 / 12卷
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摘要
Interactions between soil quality and climate change may influence the capacity of croplands to produce sufficient food. Here, we address this issue by using a new dataset of soil, climate and associated yield observations for 12,115 site-years representing 90% of total cereal production in China. Across crops and environmental conditions, we show that high-quality soils reduced the sensitivity of crop yield to climate variability leading to both higher mean crop yield (10.3 ± 6.7%) and higher yield stability (decreasing variability by 15.6 ± 14.4%). High-quality soils improve the outcome for yields under climate change by 1.7% (0.5–4.0%), compared to low-quality soils. Climate-driven yield change could result in reductions of national cereal production of 11.4 Mt annually under representative concentration pathway RCP 8.5 by 2080–2099. While this production reduction was exacerbated by 14% due to soil degradation, it can be reduced by 21% through soil improvement. This study emphasizes the vital role of soil quality in agriculture under climate change.
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页码:574 / 580
页数:6
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