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Crop losses due to insects could nearly double in Europe’s bread basket due to climate
admin
2018-08-30
发布年2018
语种英语
国家国际
领域气候变化 ; 资源环境
正文(英文)
Credit: Pixabay.
A new study co-authored by Joshua Tewksbury, Future Earth Colorado Hub Director, projects insect pest damage to crops will rise sharply as temperatures continue to climb.

Wheat, maize, and rice yields, particularly in northern climates, are projected to fall as insects in temperate regions thrive in a warmer climate new research shows.

The study, published on August 31, 2018 in the journal Science, models increases in insect populations and their metabolic rates in a warmer world, and projects a 50 to 100 percent increase in pest-induced crop losses in European wheat, and 30 to 40 percent increases in north American maize, even if countries meet their existing commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

“In some temperate countries, insect pest damage to crops is projected to rise sharply as temperatures continue to climb, putting serious pressure on grain producers,” said Joshua Tewksbury, co-lead author of the research and a director of Future Earth, an international research network for global sustainability.

Insect pestilence already reduces net yields of wheat, maize and rice, three staple grains – these grains provide 42 percent of total calorie consumption worldwide. However, models assessing the agricultural effects of climate change rarely consider losses due to insects.

Future bugs, however, in a warmer climate are expected to be even hungrier and more numerous. Warmer temperatures have been shown to accelerate an individual insect’s metabolic rate, leading it to consume more food during its lifespan. And while pest populations may decline in some hotter tropical areas, they are expected to increase elsewhere as temperatures rise and additional ecosystems become favorable to the insects.

The researchers calculated the potential for crop damage through 2050 by combining robust climate projection data, crop yield statistics, insect metabolic rates and other demographic information.

The study finds that Europe’s bread basket could be among the hardest hit. Currently the most productive wheat producing region in the world, pest impacts on European wheat could create a  total annual pest-induced yield losses that could top 16 million tons. Eleven European countries are predicted to see 75 percent or higher increases in insect-induced wheat losses, including the U.K., Denmark, Sweden and Ireland.

Insects could also create major impacts on maize and rice yields in North America and Asia, respectively. The U.S., the world largest maize producer, could see an almost 40 percent increase in insect-induced maize losses under current climate warming trajectories, a reduction of over 20 million tons annually. Meanwhile, one-third of the world’s rice production comes from China, where future insect-induced losses could top 27 million tons annually.

“On average, the impacts on insects adds up to about a 2.5 percent reduction in crop yield for every degree C increase in temperature – for context, this is about half the estimated direct impact of temperature change on crop yields, but in north temperate areas, the impact of increases insect damage will likely be greater than the direct impact of climate on crop yields” said Tewksbury, who is also a research professor at CU Boulder.

The study recommends changes to global agricultural practices, including increased selection for heat- and pest-resistant crops and new crop rotation patterns to reduce vulnerability to insects. In some extreme cases, greater pesticide use may become necessary to secure regional food supplies, even at the cost of possible associated health and environmental damage.

Additional co-authors of the study include Michelle Tigchelaar, David Battisti and Raymond Huey of the University of Washington; Scott Merrill of the University of Vermont; and Rosamond Naylor of Stanford University.

 

Colony of Russian wheat aphids (Diuraphis noxia) in a wheat leaf. Photo: Frank Peairs, Colorado State University.

 

European corn borer (Ostrinia nubilalis). Photo: Frank Peairs, Colorado State University.

 

About the study:
Insect metabolic and population growth rates predict increasing crop losses in a warming climate," Science, 31 August 2018.

Authors: Deutsch, Curtis A.; Tewksbury, Joshua J.; Tigchelaar, Michelle; Battisti, David S.; Merrill, Scott; Huey, Raymond B.; Naylor, Rosamond L.

DOI: 10.1126/science.aat3466

To request a copy of the manuscript please contact the
AAAS Office of Public Programs at +1 202-326-6440 or scipak@aaas.org.

Contact:
Joshua Tewksbury, co-author
206-890-7666
joshua.tewksbury@colorado.edu

Alistair Scrutton
Future Earth communications
alistair.scrutton@futureearth.org

Trent Knoss
University of Colorado Boulder media relations
303-735-0528
trent.knoss@colorado.edu

 

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来源平台future earth
文献类型新闻
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/99161
专题气候变化
资源环境科学
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