Climate change-related lessons learned from a long-term field experiment with maize

IF 6.4 1区 农林科学 Q1 AGRONOMY
Klára Pokovai, Hans-Peter Piepho, Jens Hartung, Tamás Árendás, Péter Bónis, Eszter Sugár, Roland Hollós, Nándor Fodor
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Abstract

Maize is the second most important cereal crop in European agriculture and a widely used raw material for feed, food, and energy production. Climate change studies over Europe predict a significant negative change in maize production. Finding appropriate and feasible adaptation strategies is a top priority for agriculture in the twenty-first century. Long-term agricultural experiments provide a useful resource for evaluating biological, biogeochemical, and environmental aspects of agricultural sustainability and for predicting future global changes. For the first time, we have been able to formulate a response to the question of which sowing date or hybrid choice strategies will prove beneficial in the future for the Pannonian region, based on sufficiently long experimental data. The objective of the study was to analyze a 30-year period of a multi-factorial long-term experiment at Martonvásár (Hungary) searching for traces of climate change as well as for favorable combinations of agro-management factors that can be used as adaptation options in the future. To analyze and extrapolate the data both in space and time, a multivariate statistical (response surface) model and a process-based crop simulation model were used. The results of the study yielded the following conclusions: (1) intensification of fertilization would not promote sustainable development in the region, (2) late hybrids have no perspective in the Pannonian climatic zone, and (3) earlier planting may become an effective adaptation option in the future. Our comprehensive methodology combines long-term historical weather and climate projection data with statistical and simulation models for the first time to provide agricultural stakeholders with more reliable adaptation strategies. It is essential to facilitate effective knowledge transfer to encourage farmers to adopt the proposed new practices. The collection of more detailed data for the entire Carpathian Basin will allow for the improvement of the models and projections.

从玉米长期田间试验中获得的与气候变化有关的经验教训
玉米是欧洲农业中第二重要的谷类作物,也是广泛用于饲料、食品和能源生产的原料。欧洲的气候变化研究预测玉米产量将出现显著的负面变化。寻找适当和可行的适应战略是21世纪农业的首要任务。长期农业试验为评估农业可持续性的生物、生物地球化学和环境方面以及预测未来的全球变化提供了有用的资源。基于足够长的实验数据,我们第一次能够对播种日期或杂交选择策略在未来对潘诺尼亚地区有益的问题做出回应。这项研究的目的是分析在Martonvásár(匈牙利)进行的一项为期30年的多因素长期实验,该实验旨在寻找气候变化的痕迹,以及可在未来用作适应方案的农业管理因素的有利组合。为了在空间和时间上对数据进行分析和外推,使用了多元统计(响应面)模型和基于过程的作物模拟模型。研究结果表明:(1)强化施肥不能促进该地区的可持续发展;(2)晚杂交品种在潘诺尼亚气候带没有前景;(3)提前种植可能成为未来有效的适应选择。我们的综合方法首次将长期历史天气和气候预测数据与统计和模拟模型相结合,为农业利益相关者提供更可靠的适应策略。促进有效的知识转移以鼓励农民采用拟议的新做法至关重要。收集整个喀尔巴阡盆地更详细的数据将有助于改进模型和预测。
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来源期刊
Agronomy for Sustainable Development
Agronomy for Sustainable Development 农林科学-农艺学
CiteScore
10.70
自引率
8.20%
发文量
108
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Agronomy for Sustainable Development (ASD) is a peer-reviewed scientific journal of international scope, dedicated to publishing original research articles, review articles, and meta-analyses aimed at improving sustainability in agricultural and food systems. The journal serves as a bridge between agronomy, cropping, and farming system research and various other disciplines including ecology, genetics, economics, and social sciences. ASD encourages studies in agroecology, participatory research, and interdisciplinary approaches, with a focus on systems thinking applied at different scales from field to global levels. Research articles published in ASD should present significant scientific advancements compared to existing knowledge, within an international context. Review articles should critically evaluate emerging topics, and opinion papers may also be submitted as reviews. Meta-analysis articles should provide clear contributions to resolving widely debated scientific questions.
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