Climate change impacts on Canadian yields of spring wheat, canola and maize for global warming levels of 1.5 °c, 2.0 °c, 2.5 °c and 3.0 °c

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab17fb

Language of the publication
English
Date
2019-07-01
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Qian, Budong
  • Zhang, Xuebin
  • Smith, Ward
  • Grant, Brian
  • Jing, Qi
  • Cannon, Alex J.
  • Neilsen, Denise
  • McConkey, Brian
  • Li, Guilong
  • Bonsal, Barrie
  • Wan, Hui
  • Xue, Li
  • Zhao, Jun
Publisher
Institute of Physics Publishing

Abstract

Science-based assessments of climate change impacts on cropping systems under different levels of global warming are essential for informing stakeholders which global climate targets and potential adaptation strategies may be effective. A comprehensive evaluation of climate change impacts on Canada's crop production under different levels of global warming is currently lacking. The DayCent, DNDC and DSSAT models were employed to estimate changes in crop yield and production for three prominent crops including spring wheat, canola and maize in current agricultural regions of Canada. Four warming scenarios with global mean temperature changes of 1.5 °C, 2.0 °C, 2.5 °C and 3.0 °C above the pre-industrial level were investigated. Climate scenarios from 20 Global Climate Models, included in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 and downscaled with a multivariate quantile mapping bias correction method, were used to drive the crop simulation models. Simulated yield changes demonstrate a potentially positive impact on spring wheat and canola yields at all four temperature levels, particularly when shifting planting date is considered in the simulations. There was less consensus for the currently utilized short-season maize cultivars, as yields were only projected to increase by DNDC compared to a slight decrease by DayCent and a slight increase up to 2.5 °C followed by a decrease at 3.0 °C by DSSAT. These findings indicate that climate at the global warming levels up to 3.0 °C above the pre-industrial level could be beneficial for crop production of small grains in Canada. However, these benefits declined after warming reached 2.5 °C.

Subject

  • Climate change,
  • Crops

Keywords

  • Agriculture,
  • Climatic changes,
  • Crop yields

Rights

Pagination

1-12

Peer review

Yes

Identifiers

ISSN
1748-9326

Article

Journal title
Environmental Research Letters
Journal volume
14
Journal issue
7
Article number
074005
Accepted date
2019-04-10
Submitted date
2017-10-30

Citation(s)

Qian, B, Zhang, X., Smith, W., Grant, B., Jing, Q., Cannon, A. J., Neilsen, D., McConkey, B., Li, G., Bonsal, B., Wan, H., Xue, L., & Zhao, J. (2019). Climate change impacts on Canadian yields of spring wheat, canola and maize for global warming levels of 1.5 °C, 2.0 °C, 2.5 °C and 3.0 °C. Environmental Research Letters, 14(7), Article 074005. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab17fb

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Collection(s)

Climate and weather

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