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Crop-specific exposure to extreme temperature and moisture for the globe for the last half century

Crop-specific exposure to extreme temperature and moisture for the globe for the last half century
Crop-specific exposure to extreme temperature and moisture for the globe for the last half century
Global assessments of climate extremes typically do not account for the unique characteristics of individual crops. A consistent definition of the exposure of specific crops to extreme weather would enable agriculturally-relevant hazard quantification. To this end, we develop a database of both the temperature and moisture extremes facing individual crops by explicitly accounting for crop characteristics. To do this, we collate crop-specific temperature and moisture parameters from the agronomy literature, which are then combined with time-varying crop locations and high-resolution climate information to quantify crop-specific exposure to extreme weather. Specifically, we estimate crop-specific temperature and moisture shocks during the growing season for a 0.25° spatial grid and daily time scale from 1961 to 2014 globally. We call this the Agriculturally-Relevant Exposure to Shocks (ARES) model and make all ARES output available with this paper. Our crop-specific approach leads to a smaller average value of the exposure rate and spatial extent than does a crop-agnostic approach. Of the 17 crops included in this study, 13 had an increase in exposure to extreme heat, while 9 were more exposed to extreme cold over the past half century. All crops in this study show a statistically significant increase in exposure to both extreme wetness and dryness. Cassava, sunflowers, soybeans, and oats had the greatest increase in hot, cold, dry, and wet exposure, respectively. We compare ARES model results with the EM-DAT disaster database. Our results highlight the importance of crop-specific characteristics in defining weather shocks in agriculture.
crop-specific, global, gridded, moisture, temperature, time series, weather extremes
1748-9318
Jackson, Nicole D.
5addd646-3d2a-4f31-b92f-72c62abcbd58
Konar, Megan
1a337664-ce3c-4c2b-9ebc-f95bd6c78f84
Debaere, Peter
ce6d89f7-5ae6-40b4-b84a-19101beb92cb
Sheffield, Justin
dd66575b-a4dc-4190-ad95-df2d6aaaaa6b
Jackson, Nicole D.
5addd646-3d2a-4f31-b92f-72c62abcbd58
Konar, Megan
1a337664-ce3c-4c2b-9ebc-f95bd6c78f84
Debaere, Peter
ce6d89f7-5ae6-40b4-b84a-19101beb92cb
Sheffield, Justin
dd66575b-a4dc-4190-ad95-df2d6aaaaa6b

Jackson, Nicole D., Konar, Megan, Debaere, Peter and Sheffield, Justin (2021) Crop-specific exposure to extreme temperature and moisture for the globe for the last half century. Environmental Research Letters, 16 (6), [064006]. (doi:10.1088/1748-9326/abf8e0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Global assessments of climate extremes typically do not account for the unique characteristics of individual crops. A consistent definition of the exposure of specific crops to extreme weather would enable agriculturally-relevant hazard quantification. To this end, we develop a database of both the temperature and moisture extremes facing individual crops by explicitly accounting for crop characteristics. To do this, we collate crop-specific temperature and moisture parameters from the agronomy literature, which are then combined with time-varying crop locations and high-resolution climate information to quantify crop-specific exposure to extreme weather. Specifically, we estimate crop-specific temperature and moisture shocks during the growing season for a 0.25° spatial grid and daily time scale from 1961 to 2014 globally. We call this the Agriculturally-Relevant Exposure to Shocks (ARES) model and make all ARES output available with this paper. Our crop-specific approach leads to a smaller average value of the exposure rate and spatial extent than does a crop-agnostic approach. Of the 17 crops included in this study, 13 had an increase in exposure to extreme heat, while 9 were more exposed to extreme cold over the past half century. All crops in this study show a statistically significant increase in exposure to both extreme wetness and dryness. Cassava, sunflowers, soybeans, and oats had the greatest increase in hot, cold, dry, and wet exposure, respectively. We compare ARES model results with the EM-DAT disaster database. Our results highlight the importance of crop-specific characteristics in defining weather shocks in agriculture.

Text
Jackson_2021_Environ._Res._Lett._16_064006 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 April 2021
Published date: 17 May 2021
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd.
Keywords: crop-specific, global, gridded, moisture, temperature, time series, weather extremes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 471539
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471539
ISSN: 1748-9318
PURE UUID: 13fea8bf-43f1-40de-83fd-21d00b153d0a
ORCID for Justin Sheffield: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2400-0630

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 10 Nov 2022 17:41
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:40

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Contributors

Author: Nicole D. Jackson
Author: Megan Konar
Author: Peter Debaere

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