TY - JOUR
T1 - Compound heat and moisture extreme impacts on global crop yields under climate change
AU - Lesk, Corey
AU - Anderson, Weston
AU - Rigden, Angela
AU - Coast, Onoriode
AU - Jägermeyr, Jonas
AU - McDermid, Sonali
AU - Davis, Kyle F.
AU - Konar, Megan
N1 - O.C. respectfully acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land on which he works and lives, the country of the Anaiwan people. He pays respect to their Elders past, present and emerging and recognizes that their sovereignty was never ceded. C.L. received funding from the US Department of Interior Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center, Dartmouth Neukom Institute for Computational Science and the Fonds de recherche du Québec — Nature et technologies award #319165. K.F.D. was supported in part by the University of Delaware General University Research fund. W.A. was supported by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance (BHA) PAPA AID-FFP-T-17-00001. J.J. was supported by the NASA GISS Climate Impacts Group and the Open Philanthropy Project.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Extreme heat, drought and moisture excess are increasingly co-occurring within a single growing season, impacting crop yields in global breadbasket regions. In this Review, we synthesize understanding of compound heat and moisture extremes, their impacts on global crop yields and implications for adaptation. Heat and moisture extremes and their impacts become compounded through crop-physiological interactions, heat–moisture couplings in the climate system and crop–atmosphere interactions. Since around 2000, these compound extremes, and hot droughts in particular, have been linked to especially poor harvests (up to 30% yield losses) in regions such as India, Ethiopia, the USA, Europe and Russia. However, in some cases, combinations of crop stresses might generate compensating effects. Compound extremes are projected to increase in frequency and amplitude in the future, but, owing to the biophysical interdependence among temperature, water and crop physiology, the net yield effects of such future compound extremes remain uncertain. Accordingly, compound extremes will necessitate comprehensive agricultural adaptation strategies geared towards multi-stress resilience, as adaptations that work for single climate stresses could be maladaptive under combined stresses. An integrated understanding of heat and water in soil–plant–atmosphere dynamics is urgently needed to understand risks and suitably adapt cropping systems to compounding climate impacts.
AB - Extreme heat, drought and moisture excess are increasingly co-occurring within a single growing season, impacting crop yields in global breadbasket regions. In this Review, we synthesize understanding of compound heat and moisture extremes, their impacts on global crop yields and implications for adaptation. Heat and moisture extremes and their impacts become compounded through crop-physiological interactions, heat–moisture couplings in the climate system and crop–atmosphere interactions. Since around 2000, these compound extremes, and hot droughts in particular, have been linked to especially poor harvests (up to 30% yield losses) in regions such as India, Ethiopia, the USA, Europe and Russia. However, in some cases, combinations of crop stresses might generate compensating effects. Compound extremes are projected to increase in frequency and amplitude in the future, but, owing to the biophysical interdependence among temperature, water and crop physiology, the net yield effects of such future compound extremes remain uncertain. Accordingly, compound extremes will necessitate comprehensive agricultural adaptation strategies geared towards multi-stress resilience, as adaptations that work for single climate stresses could be maladaptive under combined stresses. An integrated understanding of heat and water in soil–plant–atmosphere dynamics is urgently needed to understand risks and suitably adapt cropping systems to compounding climate impacts.
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U2 - 10.1038/s43017-022-00368-8
DO - 10.1038/s43017-022-00368-8
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85143529302
SN - 2662-138X
VL - 3
SP - 872
EP - 889
JO - Nature Reviews Earth and Environment
JF - Nature Reviews Earth and Environment
IS - 12
ER -