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Publication Date
3 May 2017

Kernels of Knowledge: How Land Use Decisions Affect Crop Productivity

Subtitle
Empirical models predict smaller decrease in total corn yields than previous estimates.
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Science

Farmers tend to grow crops on land with optimal water and nutrient availability conditions. When these conditions become less than optimal, farmers might shift planting dates, switch to or develop a different crop variety, or even look for new places to grow, therefore changing crop spatial distribution patterns. A study by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory showed that changes in crop spatial distribution patterns, as an integral part of land cover and land use change, can modulate crop yields in response to Earth system changes.

Impact

Results showed that previous empirical studies could be significantly biased in assessing the effects of Earth system changes by ignoring the changes in crop spatial distribution patterns.

Summary

Numerous studies using statistical approaches have confirmed a link between crop yield and climate variability. A crucial assumption in these studies is that crop spatial distribution patterns are constant over time. However, it is likely that for some crop-region combinations, this might not be valid because of a shift in spatial distribution patterns made possible by crop technology advances and competing land use demands. To date, how this kind of land cover and land use change modulates crop yield response to Earth system changes is unclear. Analyzing data from the lower 48 United States, PNNL scientists investigated how county-level changes in crop spatial distribution patterns regulate state-level corn yield responses to Earth system changes. They found that corn yield response to Earth system changes varied with the crop’s spatial distribution pattern, with distinct effects at the state level. The observation-based empirical models established in this study projected total corn yields in the lower 48 United States to decrease 20-40 percent by 2050 under changing crop spatial patterns, compared to 26-52 percent with crop distributions held constant.

Point of Contact
Maoyi Huang
Institution(s)
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL)
Funding Program Area(s)
Publication