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Discipline:Atmospheric Sciences

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10) Xi Zhao, Yanluan Lin*, Yali Luo, Qifeng Qian, Xi Liu, Xiantong Liu, Brain Colle, A Double-Moment SBU-YLIN Cloud Microphysics Scheme and its Impact on a Squall Line Simulation, Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, in revision.

Release time:2022-04-25 Hits:

DOI number:10.1002/2017EF000768
Journal:Earth's Future
Abstract:Agricultural food production in China is deeply vulnerable to extreme droughts. Although there are many studies to evaluate this issue from different aspects, comprehensive assessments with full consideration of climate change, crop rotations, irrigation effects, and socioeconomic factors in broad scales have not been well addressed. Considering both the probability of drought occurrence and the consequential yield losses, here we propose an integrated approach for assessing past and future agricultural drought risks that relies on multimodel ensemble simulations calibrated for rice, maize, and wheat (RMW) in China. Our results show that irrigation has reduced drought-related yield losses by 31 ± 2%; the largest reductions in food production were primarily attributable to socioeconomic factors rather than droughts during 1955–2014. Unsustainable water management, especially groundwater management, could potentially cause disastrous consequences in both food production and water supply in extreme events. Our simulations project a rise of 2.5~3.3% in average rice, maize, and wheat productivity before 2050 but decrease thereafter if climate warming continues. The frequency of extreme agricultural droughts in China is projected to increase under all examined Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP). A current 100-year drought is projected to occur once every 30 years under RCP 2.6, once every 13 years under RCP 4.5, and once every 5 years under RCP 8.5. This increased occurrence of severe droughts would double the rate of drought-induced yield losses in the largest warming scenario. Policies for future food security should prioritize sustainable intensification and conservation of groundwater, as well as geographically balanced water resource and food production.
Note:Yu, C., X. Huang, H. Chen, G. Huang, S. Ni, J. S. Wright, J. Hall, P. Ciais, J. Zhang, Y. Xiao, Z. Sun, X. Wang and L. Yu
Indexed by:Journal paper
Discipline:Agricultural science
First-Level Discipline:Agricultural Resources and Environment
Volume:6
Issue:5
Page Number:689-703
Translation or Not:no
Included Journals:SCI
Links to published journals:https://doi.org/10.1002/2017EF000768