Global crop yield reductions due to surface ozone exposure: 1. Year 2000 crop production losses and economic damage
Shiri Avnery, Denise L. Mauzerall, Junfeng Liu and Larry W. HorowitzAbstract
Exposure to elevated concentrations of surface ozone (O3) causes substantial reductions in the agricultural yields of many crops. As emissions of O3 precursors rise in many parts of the world over the next few decades, yield reductions from O3
exposure appear likely to increase the challenges of feeding a global
population projected to grow from 6 to 9 billion between 2000 and 2050.
This study estimates year 2000 global yield reductions of three key
staple crops (soybean, maize, and wheat) due to surface ozone exposure
using hourly O3 concentrations simulated by the Model for
Ozone and Related Chemical Tracers version 2.4 (MOZART-2). We calculate
crop losses according to two metrics of ozone exposure – seasonal
daytime (08:00–19:59) mean O3 (M12) and accumulated O3 above a threshold of 40 ppbv (AOT40) – and predict crop yield losses using crop-specific O3 concentration:response functions established by field studies. Our results indicate that year 2000 O3-induced
global yield reductions ranged, depending on the metric used, from
8.5–14% for soybean, 3.9–15% for wheat, and 2.2–5.5% for maize. Global
crop production losses totaled 79–121 million metric tons, worth $11–18
billion annually (USD2000). Our calculated yield reductions
agree well with previous estimates, providing further evidence that
yields of major crops across the globe are already being substantially
reduced by exposure to surface ozone – a risk that will grow unless O3-precursor emissions are curbed in the future or crop cultivars are developed and utilized that are resistant to O3.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1352231010010137
No comments:
Post a Comment