Publication Abstracts
Müller et al. 2021
Müller, C., J. Franke,
, , J. Elliott, E. Moyer, J. Heinke, P. Falloon, C. Folberth, L. Francois, T. Hank, R. Izaurralde, I. Jacquemin, W. Liu, S. Olin, T. Pugh, K. Williams, and F. Zabel, 2021: Exploring uncertainties in global crop yield projections in a large ensemble of crop models and CMIP5 and CMIP6 climate scenarios. Environ. Res. Lett., 16, no. 3, 034040, doi:10.1088/1748-9326/abd8fc.Concerns over climate change are motivated in large part because of their impact on human society. Assessing the effect of that uncertainty on specific potential impacts is demanding, since it requires a systematic survey over both climate and impacts models. We provide a comprehensive evaluation of uncertainty in projected crop yields for maize, spring and winter wheat, rice, and soybean, using a suite of 9 crop models and up to 45 CMIP5 and 34 CMIP6 climate projections for three different forcing scenarios. To make this task computationally tractable, we use a new set of statistical crop model emulators. We find that climate and crop models contribute about equally to overall uncertainty. While the ranges of yield uncertainties under CMIP5 and CMIP6 projections are similar, median impact in aggregate total caloric production is typically more negative for the CMIP6 projections (+1 to -19%) than for CMIP5 (+5 to -13%). In the first half of the 21st century and for individual crops is the spread across crop models typically wider than that across climate models, but we find distinct differences between crops: globally, wheat and maize uncertainties are dominated by the crop models, but soybean and rice are more sensitive to the climate projections. Climate models with very similar global mean warming can lead to very different aggregate impacts so that climate model uncertainties remain a significant contributor to agricultural impacts uncertainty. These results show the utility of large-ensemble methods that allow comprehensively evaluating factors affecting crop yields or other impacts under climate change. The crop model ensemble used here is unbalanced and pulls the assumption that all projections are equally plausible into question. Better methods for consistent model testing, also at the level of individual processes, will have to be developed and applied by the crop modeling community.
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BibTeX Citation
@article{mu00200u, author={Müller, C. and Franke, J. and Jägermeyr, J. and Ruane, A. C. and Elliott, J. and Moyer, E. and Heinke, J. and Falloon, P. and Folberth, C. and Francois, L. and Hank, T. and Izaurralde, R. and Jacquemin, I. and Liu, W. and Olin, S. and Pugh, T. and Williams, K. and Zabel, F.}, title={Exploring uncertainties in global crop yield projections in a large ensemble of crop models and CMIP5 and CMIP6 climate scenarios}, year={2021}, journal={Environmental Research Letters}, volume={16}, number={3}, pages={034040}, doi={10.1088/1748-9326/abd8fc}, }
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RIS Citation
TY - JOUR ID - mu00200u AU - Müller, C. AU - Franke, J. AU - Jägermeyr, J. AU - Ruane, A. C. AU - Elliott, J. AU - Moyer, E. AU - Heinke, J. AU - Falloon, P. AU - Folberth, C. AU - Francois, L. AU - Hank, T. AU - Izaurralde, R. AU - Jacquemin, I. AU - Liu, W. AU - Olin, S. AU - Pugh, T. AU - Williams, K. AU - Zabel, F. PY - 2021 TI - Exploring uncertainties in global crop yield projections in a large ensemble of crop models and CMIP5 and CMIP6 climate scenarios JA - Environ. Res. Lett. JO - Environmental Research Letters VL - 16 IS - 3 SP - 034040 DO - 10.1088/1748-9326/abd8fc ER -
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