Potential impact of future climates on rice production in Ecuador determined using kobayashi’s ‘very simple model’
Autor
Portalanza, Diego
Horgan, Finbarr G.
Pohlmann, Valeria
Vianna Cuadra, Santiago
Torres-Ulloa, Malena
Alava, Eduardo
Ferraz, Simone
Durigon, Angelica
Fecha
2022Resumen
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is the main staple food of more than 50% of the world’s population.
However, global production may need to increase by more than 70% before 2050 to meet global
food requirements despite increasing challenges due to environmental degradation, a changing
climate, and extreme weather events. Rice production in Ecuador, mainly concentrated in lowland
tropical plains, declined in recent years. In this paper, we aim to calibrate and validate Kobayashi’s
‘Very Simple Model’ (VSM) and, using downscaled corrected climate data, to quantify the potential
impact of climate change on rice yields for Ecuador’s two main rice-growing provinces. The negative
impact is expected to be highest (up to −67%; 2946 tons) under the Representative Concentration
Pathway (RCP) 8.5, with a lower impact under RCP 2.6 (−36%; 1650 tons) yield reduction in the
Guayas province. A positive impact on yield is predicted for Los Ríos Province (up to 9%; 161 tons)
under RCP 8.5. These different impacts indicate the utility of fine-scale analyses using simple models
to make predictions that are relevant to regional production scenarios. Our prediction of possible
changes in rice productivity can help policymakers define a variety of requirements to meet the
demands of a changing climate.
Fuente
Agriculture, 12(11), 1828Link de Acceso
Click aquí para ver el documentoIdentificador DOI
doi.org/10.3390/agriculture12111828Colecciones
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