Quantifying the response of cotton production in eastern Australia to climate change

2. Zero hunger Atmospheric Science Global and Planetary Change cotton production 2306 Global and Planetary Change 15. Life on land 01 natural sciences 333 Textile and fibre plants climate change 13. Climate action 1902 Atmospheric Science APSIM Agricultural meteorology. Crops and climate 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-014-1305-y Publication Date: 2014-12-11T16:10:46Z
ABSTRACT
Abstract The paper evaluates the effect of future climate change (as per the CSIRO Mk3.5 A1FI future climate projection) on cotton yield in Southern Queensland and Northern NSW, eastern Australia by using of the biophysical simulation model APSIM (Agricultural Production Systems sIMulator). The simulations of cotton production show that changes in the influential meteorological parameters caused by climate change would lead to decreased future cotton yields without the effect of CO2 fertilisation. By 2050 the yields would decrease by 17 %. Including the effects of CO2 fertilisation ameliorates the effect of decreased water availability and yields increase by 5.9 % by 2030, but then decrease by 3.6 % in 2050. Importantly, it was necessary to increase irrigation amounts by almost 50 % to maintain adequate soil moisture levels. The effect of CO2 was found to have an important positive impact of the yield in spite of deleterious climate change. This implies that the physiological response of plants to climate change needs to be thoroughly understood to avoid making erroneous projections of yield and potentially stifling investment or increasing risk.
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