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Climate
Change Poses Threat
To
Food Supply, Scientists Say
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by
Michael McCarthy, April 27, 2005
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Worldwide
production of essential crops such as wheat, rice, maize and
soya beans is likely to be hit much harder by global warming
than previously predicted, an international conference in London
has heard.
The benefits
of higher levels of the main greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide,
will in fact be outweighed by the downsides of climate change,
a Royal Society discussion meeting was told yesterday. It had
been thought that the gas might act as a fertiliser to increase
plant growth. Rising atmospheric temperatures, longer droughts
and side-effects of both, such as higher levels of ground-level
ozone gas, are likely to bring about a substantial reduction
in crop yields in the coming decades, large-scale experiments
have shown.
The two-day
meeting, entitled Food Crops in a Changing Climate, is focusing
largely on tropical countries where most of the world's food
is grown, and where people are most vulnerable to climate change.
It is
bringing together leading scientists in the fields of meteorology,
climate science and agriculture to report on the latest research,
including growing crops in experimental conditions in the open
air that simulate advanced global warming. Previously, such
experiments had taken place in closed chambers, and these had
suggested that the "fertilisation" effect of rising
CO2 would offset the detrimental effects of rising temperatures
and drought incidence on crop production.
But,
a new technology known as Face (Free-Air Concentration Enrichment)
is allowing treatment of large areas of crop with elevated levels
of CO2 and ozone, and these experiments have painted a very
different picture.
"Growing
crops much closer to real conditions has shown that increased
levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will have roughly
half the beneficial effects previously hoped for in the event
of climate change," said Steve Long, from Illinois University.
"In
addition, ground-level ozone, which is also predicted to rise
but has not been extensively studied before, has been shown
to result in a loss of photosynthesis and 20 per cent yield
loss. Both these results show that we need to seriously re-examine
our predictions for future global food production, as they are
likely to be far lower than previously estimated," Professor
Long said.
Additionally,
studies in the UK and Denmark show that just a few days of hot
temperatures can severely reduce the yield of major food crops
such as wheat, soya beans, rice and groundnuts, if they coincide
with the flowering of these crops.
These
results suggest that there are particular thresholds above which
crops become very vulnerable to climate change.
On a
more positive note, the meeting also highlighted new developments
in forecasting techniques, the basis of which can act as early
warning systems of famine.
The techniques
incorporate a climate prediction model with a model that simulates
crop growth under varying environmental conditions.
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