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Contrasting impacts of dry versus humid heat on US corn and soybean yields

Mingfang Ting, Corey Lesk, Chunyu Liu, Cuihua Li, Radley Horton, Ethan Coffel, Cassandra D. W. Rogers, Deepti Singh

2023Scientific Reports28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The impact of extreme heat on crop yields is an increasingly pressing issue given anthropogenic climate warming. However, some of the physical mechanisms involved in these impacts remain unclear, impeding adaptation-relevant insight and reliable projections of future climate impacts on crops. Here, using a multiple regression model based on observational data, we show that while extreme dry heat steeply reduced U.S. corn and soy yields, humid heat extremes had insignificant impacts and even boosted yields in some areas, despite having comparably high dry-bulb temperatures as their dry heat counterparts. This result suggests that conflating dry and humid heat extremes may lead to underestimated crop yield sensitivities to extreme dry heat. Rainfall tends to precede humid but not dry heat extremes, suggesting that multivariate weather sequences play a role in these crop responses. Our results provide evidence that extreme heat in recent years primarily affected yields by inducing moisture stress, and that the conflation of humid and dry heat extremes may lead to inaccuracy in projecting crop yield responses to warming and changing humidity.

Topics & Concepts

Extreme heatEnvironmental scienceClimate changeCropYield (engineering)Dry-bulb temperatureDry heatHumidityHeat stressAgronomyCrop yieldClimate modelClimatologyAtmospheric sciencesMeteorologyEcologyBiologyGeographyMaterials scienceMetallurgyComposite materialGeologyClimate change impacts on agricultureClimate variability and modelsPlant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics
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