Addressing agricultural nitrogen losses in a changing climate

2. Zero hunger Economics 13. Climate action Element cycles 0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries Agriculture 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences Biogeochemistry 15. Life on land Climate-change impacts 6. Clean water
DOI: 10.1038/s41893-018-0106-0 Publication Date: 2018-07-27T14:47:51Z
ABSTRACT
Losses of nitrogen from agriculture are a major threat to environmental and human health at local, regional and global scales. Emerging evidence shows that climate change and intensive agricultural management will interact to increase the harmful effects and undermine current mitigation efforts. Identifying effective mitigation strategies and supporting policies requires an integrated understanding of the processes underlying potential agricultural nitrogen responses to climate change. In this Review, we describe these processes, propose a set of multi-scale principles to guide research and policy for decreasing nitrogen losses in the future, and describe the economic factors that could constrain or enable their implementation. Climate change and intensive agricultural management will interact to increase nitrogen (N) losses from agriculture. This Review analyses the processes underlying potential agricultural N responses to climate change, proposes a set of principles to help decrease N losses in the future and describes the economic factors that could affect their implementation.
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