Climate service driven adaptation may alleviate the impacts of climate change in agriculture

Publication date

2022-11-12



Abstract

Building a resilient and sustainable agricultural sector requires the development and implementation of tailored climate change adaptation strategies. By focusing on durum wheat (Triticum turgidum subsp. durum) in the Euro-Mediterranean region, we estimate the benefits of adapting through seasonal cultivar-selection supported by an idealised agro-climate service based on seasonal climate forecasts. The cost of inaction in terms of mean yield losses, in 2021–2040, ranges from −7.8% to −5.8% associated with a 7% to 12% increase in interannual variability. Supporting cultivar choices at local scale may alleviate these impacts and even turn them into gains, from 0.4% to 5.3%, as soon as the performance of the agro-climate service increases. However, adaptation advantages on mean yield may come with doubling the estimated increase in the interannual yield variability.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

6

Publisher

Nature

Published in

Communications Biology

Grant Agreement Number

EC/H2020/776467/EU/Turning climate-related information into added value for traditional MEDiterranean Grape, OLive and Durum wheat foods systems/MED-GOLD

EC/H2020/817566/EU/Modelling INdividual Decisions to Support The European Policies related to agriculture/MIND STEP

Recommended citation

Toreti, Andrea, Simona Bassu, Senthold Asseng, Matteo Zampieri, Andrej Ceglar, and Conxita Royo. 2022. "Climate Service Driven Adaptation May Alleviate The Impacts Of Climate Change In Agriculture". Communications Biology 5 (1). doi:10.1038/s42003-022-04189-9.

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