Litcius/Paper detail

Crop-climate feedbacks boost US maize and soy yields

Ethan Coffel, Corey Lesk, Jonathan M. Winter, E. C. Osterberg, Justin Mankin

2022Environmental Research Letters18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract US maize and soy production have increased rapidly since the mid-20th century. While global warming has raised temperatures in most regions over this time period, trends in extreme heat have been smaller over US croplands, reducing crop-damaging high temperatures and benefiting maize and soy yields. Here we show that agricultural intensification has created a crop-climate feedback in which increased crop production cools local climate, further raising crop yields. We find that maize and soy production trends have driven cooling effects approximately as large as greenhouse gas induced warming trends in extreme heat over the central US and substantially reduced them over the southern US, benefiting crops in all regions. This reduced warming has boosted maize and soy yields by 3.3 (2.7–3.9; 13.7%–20.0%) and 0.6 (0.4–0.7; 7.5%–13.7%) bu/ac/decade, respectively, between 1981 and 2019. Our results suggest that if maize and soy production growth were to stagnate, the ability of the crop-climate feedback to mask warming would fade, exposing US crops to more harmful heat extremes.

Topics & Concepts

CropEnvironmental scienceGlobal warmingAgricultureClimate changeAgronomyGreenhouse gasClimate extremesCrop yieldBiologyEcologyClimate change impacts on agriculturePlant responses to elevated CO2Climate variability and models