Climate change and agriculture
From YOUTH CAN TANZANIA
Climate change and agriculture
are interrelated processes, both of which take place on a global scale.[1]
Global warming is projected to have significant impacts on conditions
affecting agriculture, including temperature, carbon dioxide,
glacial run-off, precipitation and the interaction of these elements.[2]
These conditions determine the carrying capacity
of the biosphere
to produce enough food for the human population
and domesticated animals. The overall effect of climate change on agriculture
will depend on the balance of these effects. Assessment of the effects of
global climate changes on agriculture might help to properly anticipate and
adapt farming to maximize agricultural production.[2]
At the same time, agriculture has
been shown to produce significant effects on climate change, primarily through
the production and release of greenhouse gases
such as carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide,
but also by altering the Earth's land cover,
which can change its ability to absorb or reflect heat and light, thus
contributing to radiative forcing. Land use change such as deforestation
and desertification, together with use of fossil fuels,
are the major anthropogenic sources of carbon dioxide; agriculture itself is the major
contributor to increasing methane and nitrous oxide concentrations in Earth's atmosphere.[3]
Contents
- 1 Impact of climate change on agriculture
- 1.1 Observed impacts
- 1.2 Projections
- 1.3 Regional
- 1.3.1 Africa
- 1.3.2 Asia
- 1.3.3 Australia and New Zealand
- 1.3.4 Europe
- 1.3.5 Latin America
- 1.3.6 North America
- 1.3.7 Polar regions (Arctic and Antarctic)
- 1.3.8 Small islands
- 1.4 Poverty impacts
- 1.5 Mitigation and adaptation in developing countries
- 1.6 Crop development models
- 1.7 Temperature potential effect on growing period
- 1.8 Effect of elevated carbon dioxide on crops
- 1.9 Agricultural surfaces and climate changes
- 1.10 Erosion and fertility
- 1.11 Potential effects of global climate change on pests, diseases and weeds
- 1.12 Glacier retreat and disappearance
- 1.13 Ozone and UV-B
- 1.14 ENSO effects on agriculture
- 2 Impact of agriculture on climate change
- 3 See also
- 4 Notes
- 5 References
- 6 Further reading
- 7 External links
Impact
of climate change on agriculture
This section needs additional
citations for verification. Please help improve this article
by adding
citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2007)
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For each plant variety, there is an
optimal temperature for vegetative growth, with growth dropping off as
temperatures increase or decrease. Similarly, there is a range of temperatures
at which a plant will produce seed. Outside of this range, the plant will not
reproduce. As the graphs show, corn will fail to reproduce at temperatures above 95 °F and
soybean above
102 °F.[4]
Despite technological advances, such
as improved varieties, genetically modified organisms, and irrigation
systems, weather is still a key factor in agricultural productivity, as well as
soil
properties and natural communities. The effect of climate on agriculture is related to
variabilities in local climates rather than in global climate patterns. The
Earth's average surface temperature has increased by 1.5°F (0.83°C) since 1880.
Consequently, agronomists consider any assessment has to be individually consider
each local area.
On the other hand, agricultural trade has grown in recent years, and now provides significant
amounts of food, on a national level to major importing countries, as well as
comfortable income to exporting ones. The international aspect of trade and
security in terms of food implies the need to also consider the effects of climate change on a global scale.
A study published in Science suggests that, due to climate change, "southern Africa
could lose more than 30% of its main crop, maize, by 2030. In South Asia losses
of many regional staples, such as rice, millet and maize could top 10%".[5][6]
The Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
has produced several reports that have assessed the scientific literature on climate change. The IPCC Third
Assessment Report, published in 2001, concluded that
the poorest countries would be hardest hit, with reductions in crop yields in
most tropical and sub-tropical regions due to decreased water availability, and
new or changed insect pest incidence. In Africa and Latin America many rainfed
crops are near their maximum temperature tolerance, so that yields are likely
to fall sharply for even small climate changes; falls in agricultural
productivity of up to 30% over the 21st century are projected. Marine life and
the fishing industry will also be severely affected in some places.
Climate change induced by increasing
greenhouse gases is likely to affect crops differently from region to
region. For example, average crop yield is expected to drop down to 50% in
Pakistan according to the UKMO scenario
whereas corn production in Europe is expected to grow up to 25% in optimum hydrologic
conditions.
More favourable effects on yield
tend to depend to a large extent on realization of the potentially beneficial
effects of carbon dioxide on crop growth and increase of efficiency in water use.
Decrease in potential yields is likely to be caused by shortening of the
growing period, decrease in water availability and poor vernalization.
In the long run, the climatic change
could affect agriculture in several ways :
- productivity, in terms of quantity and quality of crops
- agricultural practices, through changes of water use (irrigation) and agricultural inputs such as herbicides, insecticides and fertilizers
- environmental effects, in particular in relation of frequency and intensity of soil drainage (leading to nitrogen leaching), soil erosion, reduction of crop diversity
- rural space, through the loss and gain of cultivated lands, land speculation, land renunciation, and hydraulic amenities.
- adaptation, organisms may become more or less competitive, as well as humans may develop urgency to develop more competitive organisms, such as flood resistant or salt resistant varieties of rice.
They are large uncertainties to
uncover, particularly because there is lack of information on many specific
local regions, and include the uncertainties on magnitude of climate change,
the effects of technological changes on productivity, global food demands, and
the numerous possibilities of adaptation.
Most agronomists believe that
agricultural production will be mostly affected by the severity and pace of
climate change, not so much by gradual trends in climate. If change is gradual,
there may be enough time for biota
adjustment. Rapid climate change, however, could harm agriculture in many
countries, especially those that are already suffering from rather poor soil
and climate conditions, because there is less time for optimum natural selection
and adaption.
But much remains unknown about
exactly how climate change may affect farming and food security,
in part because the role of farmer behaviour is poorly captured by crop-climate
models. For instance, Evan Fraser, a geographer at the University of Guelph in Ontario Canada, has conducted a number of studies that show that the
socio-economic context of farming may play a huge role in determining whether a
drought has a
major, or an insignificant impact on crop production.[7][8]
In some cases, it seems that even minor droughts have big impacts on food
security (such as what happened in Ethiopia in the
early 1980s where a minor drought triggered a massive famine), versus cases where even relatively large weather related
problems were adapted to without much hardship.[9]
Evan Fraser combines socio-economic models along with climatic models to
identify “vulnerability hotspots”[8]
One such study has identified US
maize (corn) production as
particularly vulnerable to climate change because it is expected to be exposed
to worse droughts, but it does not have the socio-economic conditions that
suggest farmers will adapt to these changing conditions.[10]
Observed
impacts
So far, the effects of regional
climate change on agriculture have been relatively limited.[11]
Changes in crop phenology provide important evidence of the response to recent
regional climate change.[12]
Phenology is the study of natural phenomena that recur periodically, and how
these phenomena relate to climate and seasonal changes.[13]
A significant advance in phenology has been observed for agriculture and
forestry in large parts of the Northern Hemisphere.[11]
Droughts have been occurring more
frequently because of global warming and they are expected to become more
frequent and intense in Africa, southern Europe, the Middle East, most of the
Americas, Australia, and Southeast Asia.[14]
Their impacts are aggravated because of increased water demand, population
growth, urban expansion, and environmental protection efforts in many areas.[15]
Droughts result in crop failures and the loss of pasture grazing land for
livestock.[16]
Projections
As part of the IPCC's Fourth
Assessment Report, Schneider et al. (2007) projected the potential future effects of climate change on
agriculture.[17]
With low to medium confidence, they concluded that for about a 1 to 3 °C
global mean temperature increase (by 2100, relative to the 1990–2000 average
level) there would be productivity decreases for some cereals in low latitudes,
and productivity increases in high latitudes. In the IPCC Fourth Assessment
Report, "low confidence" means that a particular finding has about a
2 out of 10 chance of being correct, based on expert judgement. "Medium
confidence" has about a 5 out of 10 chance of being correct.[18]
Over the same time period, with medium confidence, global production potential
was projected to:[17]
- increase up to around 3 °C,
- very likely decrease above about 3 °C.
Most of the studies on global
agriculture assessed by Schneider et al. (2007) had not incorporated a
number of critical factors, including changes in extreme events, or the spread
of pests and diseases. Studies had also not considered the development of
specific practices or technologies to aid adaptation
to climate change.[19]
The US
National Research Council (US NRC,
2011)[20]
assessed the literature on the effects of climate change on crop yields. US NRC
(2011)[21]
stressed the uncertainties in their projections of changes in crop yields.
Projected changes in crop yields
at different latitudes with global warming. This graph is based on several
studies.[20]
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Projected changes in yields of
selected crops with global warming. This graph is based on several studies.[20]
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Their central estimates of changes
in crop yields are shown above. Actual changes in yields may be above or below
these central estimates.[21]
US NRC (2011)[20]
also provided an estimated the "likely" range of changes in yields.
"Likely" means a greater than 67% chance of being correct, based on
expert judgement. The likely ranges are summarized in the image descriptions of
the two graphs.
Food
security
The IPCC Fourth Assessment Report
also describes the impact of climate change on food security.[22]
Projections suggested that there could be large decreases in hunger globally by 2080, compared to the (then-current) 2006
level.[23]
Reductions in hunger were driven by projected social and economic development. For reference, the Food
and Agriculture Organization
has estimated that in 2006, the number of people undernourished globally was
820 million.[24]
Three scenarios without climate change (SRES A1, B1, B2) projected 100-130 million undernourished by the
year 2080, while another scenario without climate change (SRES A2) projected
770 million undernourished. Based on an expert assessment of all of the
evidence, these projections were thought to have about a 5-in-10 chance of
being correct.[18]
The same set of greenhouse gas and
socio-economic scenarios were also used in projections that included the
effects of climate change.[23]
Including climate change, three scenarios (SRES A1, B1, B2) projected
100-380 million undernourished by the year 2080, while another scenario with
climate change (SRES A2) projected 740-1,300 million undernourished. These
projections were thought to have between a 2-in-10 and 5-in-10 chance of being
correct.[18]
Projections also suggested regional
changes in the global distribution of hunger.[23]
By 2080, sub-Saharan Africa may overtake Asia as the world's most food-insecure region. This is mainly
due to projected social and economic changes, rather than climate change.[22]
"Climate change
merely increases the urgency of reforming trade policies to ensure that global food security
needs are met"[25]
said C. Bellmann, ICTSD
Programmes Director. A 2009 ICTSD-IPC study by Jodie Keane[26]
suggests that climate change could cause farm output in sub-Saharan Africa to decrease by 12 percent by 2080 - although in some
African countries this figure could be as much as 60 percent, with agricultural
exports declining by up to one fifth in
others. Adapting to climate change could cost the agriculture sector $14bn globally a year,
the study finds.
Regional
See also: Regional
effects of global warming
This section requires expansion
with: more detail regional/country level information. (February 2013)
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Africa
In Africa, IPCC (2007:13)[27]
projected that climate variability and change would severely compromise
agricultural production and access to food. This projection was assigned
"high confidence."
Africa's geography makes it
particularly vulnerable to climate change, and seventy per cent of the
population rely on rain-fed agriculture for their livelihoods. Tanzania's
official report on climate change suggests that the areas that usually get two
rainfalls in the year will probably get more, and those that get only one rainy
season will get far less. The net result is expected to be that 33% less maize—the
country's staple crop—will be grown.[28]
Asia
In East and Southeast Asia,
IPCC (2007:13)[27]
projected that crop yields could increase up to 20% by the mid-21st century. In Central and South
Asia, projections suggested that yields might decrease by up to 30%, over the
same time period. These projections were assigned "medium
confidence." Taken together, the risk of hunger was projected to remain
very high in several developing countries.
More detailed analysis of rice
yields by the International
Rice Research Institute forecast
20% reduction in yields over the region per degree Celsius of temperature rise.
Rice becomes sterile if exposed to temperatures above 35 degrees for more than
one hour during flowering and consequently produces no grain.[citation needed]
A 2013 study by the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid
Tropics (ICRISAT) aimed to
find science-based, pro-poor approaches and techniques that would enable Asia's
agricultural systems to cope with climate change, while benefitting poor and
vulnerable farmers. The study's recommendations ranged from improving the use
of climate information in local planning and strengthening weather-based
agro-advisory services, to stimulating diversification of rural household
incomes and providing incentives to farmers to adopt natural resource
conservation measures to enhance forest cover, replenish groundwater and use renewable energy.[29]
A 2014 study found that warming had increased maize yields in the Heilongjiang
region of China had increased by between 7 and 17% per decade as a result of
rising temperatures.[30]
Australia
and New Zealand
Hennessy et al.. (2007:509)[31]
assessed the literature for Australia
and New Zealand. They concluded that without further adaptation to climate
change, projected impacts would likely be substantial: By 2030, production from
agriculture and forestry was projected to decline over much of southern and eastern
Australia, and over parts of eastern New Zealand; In New Zealand, initial
benefits were projected close to major rivers and in western and southern areas.
Hennessy et al.. (2007:509)[31]
placed high confidence in these projections.
Europe
With high confidence, IPCC (2007:14)[27]
projected that in Southern Europe, climate change would reduce crop productivity. In Central and Eastern Europe,
forest productivity was expected to decline. In Northern Europe,
the initial effect of climate change was projected to increase crop yields.
Latin
America
With high confidence, IPCC (2007:14)[27]
projected that in drier areas of Latin America,
productivity of some important crops would decrease and livestock
productivity decline, with adverse consequences for food security. In temperate
zones, soybean yields
were projected to increase.
North
America
A number of studies have been
produced which assess the impacts of climate change on agriculture in North America.
The IPCC Fourth Assessment Report of agricultural impacts in the region cites
26 different studies.[32]
With high confidence, IPCC (2007:14–15)[27]
projected that over the first few decades of this century, moderate climate
change would increase aggregate yields of rain-fed agriculture by 5–20%, but
with important variability among regions. Major challenges were projected for
crops that are near the warm end of their suitable range or which depend on
highly utilized water resources.
Droughts are becoming more frequent
and intense in arid and semiarid western North America as temperatures have been rising,
advancing the timing and magnitude of spring snow melt floods and reducing river
flow volume in summer. Direct effects of climate change include increased heat
and water stress, altered crop phenology,
and disrupted symbiotic interactions. These effects may be exacerbated by
climate changes in river flow, and the combined effects are likely to reduce the
abundance of native trees in favor of non-native herbaceous
and drought-tolerant competitors, reduce the habitat quality for many native
animals, and slow litter decomposition and nutrient cycling. Climate change
effects on human water demand and irrigation may intensify these effects.[33]
United States
The US Global Change Research
Program (2009) assessed the literature on the impacts of climate change on
agriculture in the United States:[34]
- Many crops will benefit from increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations and low levels of warming, but higher levels of warming will negatively affect growth and yields. Extreme events will likely reduce crop yields.
- Weeds. diseases and insect pests benefit from warming, and will require more attention in regards to pest and weed control.
- Increasing CO2 concentrations will reduce the land's ability to supply adequate livestock feed. Increased heat, disease, and weather extremes will likely reduce livestock productivity.
According to a paper by Deschenes
and Greenstone (2006), predicted increases in temperature and precipitation
will have virtually no effect on the most important crops in the US.[35][unbalanced opinion]
Polar
regions (Arctic and Antarctic)
Anisimov et al.. (2007:655)[36]
assessed the literature for the polar region
(Arctic and Antarctica).
With medium confidence, they concluded that the benefits of a less severe
climate were dependent on local conditions. One of these benefits was judged to
be increased agricultural and forestry opportunities.
For the Guardian newspaper,
Brown (2005)[37]
reported on how climate change had affected agriculture in Iceland. Rising
temperatures had made the widespread sowing of barley possible, which had been untenable twenty years ago. Some
of the warming was due to a local (possibly temporary) effect via ocean
currents from the Caribbean, which had also affected fish stocks.
Small
islands
See also: Alliance
of Small Island States
In a literature assessment, Mimura et
al. (2007:689)[38]
concluded that on small islands, subsistence and commercial agriculture would very likely be adversely affected by climate change.
This projection was assigned "high confidence."
Poverty
impacts
Researchers at the Overseas
Development Institute (ODI) have investigated the
potential impacts climate change could have on agriculture, and how this would
affect attempts at alleviating poverty in the developing world.[39]
They argued that the effects from moderate climate change are likely to be
mixed for developing countries. However, the vulnerability of the poor in
developing countries to short term impacts from climate change, notably the
increased frequency and severity of adverse weather events is likely to have a
negative impact. This, they say, should be taken into account when defining agricultural policy.[39]
Mitigation
and adaptation in developing countries
The Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) has
reported that agriculture is responsible for over a quarter of total global
greenhouse gas emissions.[40]
Given that agriculture’s share in global gross domestic product (GDP) is about 4 percent, these figures suggest that agriculture
is highly Green House Gas intensive. Innovative agricultural practices and
technologies can play a role in climate
mitigation and adaptation. This adaptation and mitigation potential is nowhere
more pronounced than in developing countries where agricultural productivity
remains low; poverty, vulnerability and food insecurity remain high; and the
direct effects of climate change are expected to be especially harsh. Creating
the necessary agricultural technologies and harnessing them to enable
developing countries to adapt their agricultural systems to changing climate
will require innovations in policy and institutions as well. In this context,
institutions and policies are important at multiple scales.
Travis Lybbert and Daniel Sumner[41]
suggest six policy principles: (1) The best policy and institutional responses
will enhance information flows, incentives and flexibility. (2) Policies and
institutions that promote economic development and reduce poverty will often
improve agricultural adaptation and may also pave the way for more effective
climate change mitigation through agriculture. (3) Business as usual among the
world’s poor is not adequate. (4) Existing technology options must be made more
available and accessible without overlooking complementary capacity and
investments. (5) Adaptation and mitigation in agriculture
will require local responses, but effective policy responses must also reflect
global impacts and inter-linkages. (6) Trade will play a critical role in both mitigation and
adaptation, but will itself be shaped importantly by climate change.
Crop
development models
Models for climate behavior are
frequently inconclusive. In order to further study effects of global warming on
agriculture, other types of models, such as crop development models, yield
prediction, quantities of water or fertilizer consumed, can be used.
Such models condense the knowledge accumulated of the climate, soil, and
effects observed of the results of various agricultural practices. They thus could make it possible to test strategies of
adaptation to modifications of the environment.
Because these models are necessarily
simplifying natural conditions (often based on the assumption that weeds,
disease and insect pests are
controlled), it is not clear whether the results they give will have an in-field
reality. However, some results are partly validated with an increasing number
of experimental results.
Other models, such as insect and
disease development models based on climate projections are also used (for
example simulation of aphid reproduction or septoria (cereal
fungal disease) development).
Scenarios are used in order to
estimate climate changes effects on crop development and yield. Each scenario
is defined as a set of meteorological
variables, based on generally accepted projections. For example, many models
are running simulations based on doubled carbon dioxide
projections, temperatures raise ranging from 1 °C up to 5 °C, and with rainfall
levels an increase or decrease of 20%. Other parameters may include humidity, wind,
and solar activity. Scenarios of crop models are testing farm-level
adaptation, such as sowing date shift, climate adapted species (vernalisation
need, heat and cold resistance), irrigation
and fertilizer adaptation, resistance to disease. Most developed models are
about wheat, maize, rice and soybean.
Temperature
potential effect on growing period
Duration of crop growth cycles are above all, related to temperature. An increase in
temperature will speed up development. In the case of an annual crop, the
duration between sowing and harvesting will shorten (for example, the duration in order to harvest
corn could shorten between one and four weeks). The shortening of such a cycle
could have an adverse effect on productivity because senescence
would occur sooner.[citation needed]
Effect
of elevated carbon dioxide on crops
Carbon dioxide is essential to plant growth. Rising CO2
concentration in the atmosphere can have both positive and negative
consequences.
Increased CO2 is expected
to have positive physiological effects by increasing the rate of photosynthesis.
Currently, the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is 380 parts per million.
In comparison, the amount of oxygen is 210,000 ppm. This means that often plants may be starved
of carbon dioxide as the enzyme that fixes CO2, rubisco, also
fixes oxygen in the process of photorespiration.
The effects of an increase in carbon dioxide would be higher on C3 crops (such as
wheat) than on C4 crops (such as maize), because the former is more susceptible to
carbon dioxide shortage. Studies have shown that increased CO2 leads
to fewer stomata
developing on plants[42]
which leads to reduced water usage.[43]
Under optimum conditions of temperature and humidity, the yield increase could
reach 36%, if the levels of carbon dioxide are doubled.[citation needed]
Further, few studies have looked at
the impact of elevated carbon dioxide concentrations on whole farming systems.
Most models study the relationship between CO2 and productivity in
isolation from other factors associated with climate change, such as an
increased frequency of extreme weather events,
seasonal shifts, and so on.
In 2005, the Royal Society in London
concluded that the purported benefits of elevated carbon dioxide concentrations
are "likely to be far lower than previously estimated when factors such as
increasing ground-level ozone are taken into account."[44]
Effect
on quality
According to the IPCC's TAR,
"The importance of climate change impacts on grain and forage quality
emerges from new research. For rice, the amylose content of the grain—a major
determinant of cooking quality—is increased under elevated CO2"
(Conroy et al., 1994). Cooked rice grain from plants grown in high-CO2
environments would be firmer than that from today's plants. However,
concentrations of iron and zinc, which are important for human nutrition, would
be lower (Seneweera and Conroy, 1997). Moreover, the protein content of the
grain decreases under combined increases of temperature and CO2
(Ziska et al., 1997).[45]
Studies using FACE have shown that increases in CO2 lead to
decreased concentrations of micronutrients in crop plants.[46]
This may have knock-on effects on other parts of ecosystems
as herbivores will need to eat more food to gain the same amount of protein.[47]
Studies have shown that higher CO2
levels lead to reduced plant uptake of nitrogen (and a smaller number showing
the same for trace elements such as zinc) resulting in crops with lower
nutritional value.[48][49]
This would primarily impact on populations in poorer countries less able to
compensate by eating more food, more varied diets, or possibly taking
supplements.
Reduced nitrogen content in grazing
plants has also been shown to reduce animal productivity in sheep, which depend
on microbes in their gut to digest plants, which in turn depend on nitrogen
intake.[48]
Agricultural
surfaces and climate changes
Climate change may increase the
amount of arable land in high-latitude region by reduction of the amount of
frozen lands. A 2005 study reports that temperature in Siberia has increased
three degree Celsius in average since 1960 (much more than the rest of the
world).[50]
However, reports about the impact of global warming on Russian agriculture[51]
indicate conflicting probable effects : while they expect a northward
extension of farmable lands,[52]
they also warn of possible productivity losses and increased risk of drought.[53]
Sea levels are expected to get up to
one meter higher by 2100, though this projection is disputed. A rise in the sea
level would result in an agricultural land loss, in particular in areas such as
South East Asia. Erosion, submergence of shorelines,
salinity of the water table
due to the increased sea levels, could mainly affect agriculture through inundation
of low-lying lands.
Low lying areas such as Bangladesh,
India and Vietnam will experience major loss of rice crop if sea levels rise as
expected by the end of the century. Vietnam for example relies heavily on its
southern tip, where the Mekong Delta lies, for rice planting. Any rise in sea
level of no more than a meter will drown several km2 of rice
paddies, rendering Vietnam incapable of producing its main staple and export of
rice.[54]
Erosion
and fertility
See also: Soil erosion and climate change
The warmer atmospheric temperatures
observed over the past decades are expected to lead to a more vigorous
hydrological cycle, including more extreme rainfall events. Erosion and soil
degradation is more likely to occur. Soil fertility
would also be affected by global warming. However, because the ratio of carbon
to nitrogen is a constant, a doubling of carbon is likely to imply a higher storage
of nitrogen in soils
as nitrates, thus
providing higher fertilizing elements for plants, providing better yields. The
average needs for nitrogen could decrease, and give the opportunity of changing
often costly fertilisation strategies.
Due to the extremes of climate that
would result, the increase in precipitations would probably result in greater
risks of erosion, whilst
at the same time providing soil with better hydration, according to the intensity
of the rain. The possible evolution of the organic matter
in the soil is a highly contested issue: while the increase in the temperature
would induce a greater rate in the production of minerals,
lessening the soil organic matter content, the atmospheric CO2
concentration would tend to increase it.
Potential
effects of global climate change on pests, diseases and weeds
A very important point to consider
is that weeds would undergo the same acceleration of cycle as cultivated crops,
and would also benefit from carbonaceous fertilization. Since most weeds are C3
plants, they are likely to compete even more than now against C4 crops such as
corn. However, on the other hand, some results make it possible to think that weedkillers
could gain in effectiveness with the temperature increase.[citation needed]
Global warming would cause an
increase in rainfall in some areas, which would lead to an increase of
atmospheric humidity and the duration of the wet seasons.
Combined with higher temperatures, these could favor the development of fungal diseases. Similarly, because of higher temperatures and
humidity, there could be an increased pressure from insects and disease vectors.
Glacier
retreat and disappearance
The continued retreat of
glaciers will have a number of different
quantitative impacts. In the areas that are heavily dependent on water runoff
from glaciers that melt
during the warmer summer months, a continuation of the current retreat will
eventually deplete the glacial ice and substantially reduce or eliminate
runoff. A reduction in runoff will affect the ability to irrigate crops and
will reduce summer stream flows necessary to keep dams and reservoirs
replenished.
Approximately 2.4 billion
people live in the drainage basin of the Himalayan rivers.[55]
India, China, Pakistan,
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Myanmar could
experience floods followed by severe droughts in coming decades.[56]
In India alone,
the Ganges provides water for drinking and farming for more than 500 million
people.[57][58]
The west coast of North America, which gets much of its water from glaciers in
mountain ranges such as the Rocky Mountains
and Sierra Nevada, also would be affected.[59]
Ozone
and UV-B
Some scientists think agriculture
could be affected by any decrease in stratospheric ozone, which could increase biologically dangerous ultraviolet radiation B.
Excess ultraviolet radiation B can directly affect plant physiology
and cause massive amounts of mutations,
and indirectly through changed pollinator
behavior, though such changes are not simple to quantify.[60]
However, it has not yet been ascertained whether an increase in greenhouse
gases would decrease stratospheric ozone levels.
In addition, a possible effect of
rising temperatures is significantly higher levels of ground-level ozone, which would substantially lower yields.[61]
ENSO
effects on agriculture
ENSO (El Niño
Southern Oscillation) will affect monsoon patterns more
intensely in the future as climate change warms up the ocean's water. Crops
that lie on the equatorial belt or under the tropical Walker circulation, such
as rice, will be affected by varying monsoon patterns and more unpredictable
weather. Scheduled planting and harvesting based on weather patterns will
become less effective.
Areas such as Indonesia where the
main crop consists of rice will be more vulnerable to the increased intensity
of ENSO effects in the future of climate change. University of Washington
professor, David Battisti, researched the effects of future ENSO patterns on
the Indonesian rice agriculture using [IPCC]'s 2007 annual report[62]
and 20 different logistical models mapping out climate factors such as wind
pressure, sea-level, and humidity, and found that rice harvest will experience
a decrease in yield. Bali and Java, which holds 55% of the rice yields in
Indonesia, will be likely to experience 9–10% probably of delayed monsoon
patterns, which prolongs the hungry season. Normal planting of rice crops begin
in October and harevest by January. However, as climate change affects ENSO and
consequently delays planting, harvesting will be late and in drier conditions,
resulting in less potential yields.[63]
Impact
of agriculture on climate change
Greenhouse gas emissions from
agriculture, by region, 1990-2010.
The agricultural sector is a driving
force in the gas emissions and land use effects thought to cause climate
change. In addition to being a significant user of land and
consumer of fossil fuel, agriculture contributes directly to greenhouse gas
emissions through practices such as rice production and the raising of
livestock;[64]
according to the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, the
three main causes of the increase in greenhouse gases observed over the past
250 years have been fossil fuels, land use, and agriculture.[65]
Land
use
Agriculture contributes to
greenhouse gas increases through land use in four main ways:
- CO2 releases linked to deforestation
- Methane releases from rice cultivation
- Methane releases from enteric fermentation in cattle
- Nitrous oxide releases from fertilizer application
Together, these agricultural
processes comprise 54% of methane emissions, roughly 80% of nitrous oxide
emissions, and virtually all carbon dioxide emissions tied to land use.[1]
The planet's major changes to land cover
since 1750 have resulted from deforestation
in temperate regions: when forests and woodlands are cleared to make room for
fields and pastures, the albedo of the affected area increases, which can result in either
warming or cooling effects, depending on local conditions.[66]
Deforestation also affects regional carbon reuptake,
which can result in increased concentrations of CO2,
the dominant greenhouse gas.[67]
Land-clearing methods such as slash and burn
compound these effects by burning biomatter,
which directly releases greenhouse gases and particulate matter such as soot into the air.
Livestock
Livestock and livestock-related
activities such as deforestation and increasingly fuel-intensive farming
practices are responsible for over 18%[68]
of human-made greenhouse gas emissions, including:
- 9% of global carbon dioxide emissions
- 35–40% of global methane emissions (chiefly due to enteric fermentation and manure)
- 64% of global nitrous oxide emissions (chiefly due to fertilizer use.[69])
Livestock activities also contribute
disproportionately to land-use effects, since crops such as corn and alfalfa are cultivated in order to feed the animals.
Worldwide, livestock production
occupies 70% of all land used for agriculture, or 30% of the land surface of
the Earth.[70]