The impact of weather and increased atmospheric CO 2 from 1892 to 2016 on simulated yields of UK wheat

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Abstract

Climate change effects on UK winter wheat grain yield are complex: warmer temperature, negative; greater carbon dioxide (CO 2) concentration, positive; but other environmental variables and their timing also affect yield. In the absence of long-term experiments where temperature and CO 2 concentration were manipulated separately, we applied the crop simulation model Sirius with long-term daily meteorological data (1892-2016) for Rothamsted, Hertfordshire, UK (2007-2016 mean growing season temperature 1.03°C warmer than 1892-1991), and CO 2 concentration over this period, to investigate the separate effects of historic CO 2 and weather on simulated grain yield in three wheat cultivars of the modern era. We show a slight decline in simulated yield over the period 1892-2016 from the effect of weather (daily temperature, rainfall and sunshine hours) at fixed CO 2 (294.50 ppm, 1892 reference value), but a maximum 9.4% increase when accounting for increasing atmospheric CO 2 (from 294.50 to 404.21 ppm), differing slightly among cultivars. Notwithstanding considerable inter-annual variation, the slight yield decline at 294.50 ppm CO 2 over this 125-year period from the historic weather simulations for Rothamsted agrees with the expected decline from temperature increase alone, but the positive yield trend with actual CO 2 values does not match the recent stagnation in UK wheat yield.

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Addy, J. W. G., Ellis, R. H., Macdonald, A. J., Semenov, M. A., & Mead, A. (2021). The impact of weather and increased atmospheric CO 2 from 1892 to 2016 on simulated yields of UK wheat. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 18(179). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2021.0250

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