The
impacts of climate change on maize and winter wheat yields in China from 1961
to 2010 were studied in the current paper, based on provincial data. The
results indicated that rising average temperatures resulted in decreased maize
yield in most of the study regions, and reduced maize production at a national
scale by c. 3·4% relative to the average from 1961 to 2010. Moreover, the
warming resulted in a decrease of winter wheat yield in the Huang-Huai-Hai and
southwest regions and led to an overall loss in production of c. 5·8% at a
national scale. The decrease of diurnal temperature range (DTR) affected maize
yield adversely in the west and central regions, but a beneficial DTR effect
was observed in the other provinces. The changes in DTR resulted in increased
maize production at a national scale by c. 0·6%. However, the generally
decreasing trends for DTR resulted in an increasing winter wheat yield in the
northwest and south regions but a decreasing yield in the other provinces, and
the production of winter wheat at a national scale was reduced by c. 2·9%
because of changes in DTR. Changes in precipitation increased maize and winter
wheat yields in some provinces but reduced crop yield in others. There was no
significant effect of precipitation on maize production at a national scale,
but the contribution of precipitation change reached c. 1·6% for winter wheat
production.
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/agricultural-sciences/american-research-journal-of-agriculture/
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/agricultural-sciences/american-research-journal-of-agriculture/
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