Nonlinear temperature effects indicate severe damages to U.S. crop yields under climate change

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Nonlinear temperature effects indicate severe damages to U.S. crop yields under climate change
Abstract
The United States produces 41% of the world's corn and 38% of the world's soybeans. These crops comprise two of the four largest sources of caloric energy produced and are thus critical for world food supply. We pair a panel of county-level yields for these two crops, plus cotton (a warmer-weather crop), with a new fine-scale weather dataset that incorporates the whole distribution of temperatures within each day and across all days in the growing season. We find that yields increase with temperature up to 29° C for corn, 30° C for soybeans, and 32° C for cotton but that temperatures above these thresholds are very harmful. The slope of the decline above the optimum is significantly steeper than the incline below it. The same nonlinear and asymmetric relationship is found when we isolate either time-series or cross-sectional variations in temperatures and yields. This suggests limited historical adaptation of seed varieties or management practices to warmer temperatures because the cross-section includes farmers' adaptations to warmer climates and the time-series does not. Holding current growing regions fixed, area-weighted average yields are predicted to decrease by 30–46% before the end of the century under the slowest (B1) warming scenario and decrease by 63–82% under the most rapid warming scenario (A1FI) under the Hadley III model.
Publication
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume
106
Issue
37
Pages
15594-15598
Date
2009-09-15
ISSN
0027-8424
Call Number
openalex: W2161994757
Extra
openalex: W2161994757 mag: 2161994757
Citation
Schlenker, W., & Roberts, M. J. (2009). Nonlinear temperature effects indicate severe damages to U.S. crop yields under climate change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(37), 15594–15598. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0906865106