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Climate Change and Impact on Corn and Grain Quality Eugene S. Takle Professor of Agricultural Meteorology, Department of Agronomy Professor of Atmospheric.

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Presentation on theme: "Climate Change and Impact on Corn and Grain Quality Eugene S. Takle Professor of Agricultural Meteorology, Department of Agronomy Professor of Atmospheric."— Presentation transcript:

1 Climate Change and Impact on Corn and Grain Quality Eugene S. Takle Professor of Agricultural Meteorology, Department of Agronomy Professor of Atmospheric Science, Department of Geological and Atmospheric Sciences Director, Climate Science Initiative Iowa State University gstakle@iastate.edu 49 th Annual Corn Dry Milling Conference, 29-30 May 2008, Peoria, IL

2 Outline Comparison of natural variability of climate and humaninduced climate change Projections of future climate change Impact of climate change on “regions suitable for rain-fed agriculture”, including the US Midwest What does this mean for agriculture and cornproduction in the US Midwest?

3 CO 2, CH 4 and temperature records from Antarctic ice core data Source: Vimeux, F., K.M. Cuffey, and Jouzel, J., 2002, "New insights into Southern Hemisphere temperature changes from Vostok ice cores using deuterium excess correction", Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 203, 829-843.

4 CO 2, CH 4 and temperature records from Antarctic ice core data Source: Vimeux, F., K.M. Cuffey, and Jouzel, J., 2002, "New insights into Southern Hemisphere temperature changes from Vostok ice cores using deuterium excess correction", Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 203, 829-843. Natural cycles Pattern repeats about every 100,000 years

5 IPCC Third Assessment Report

6 2008 384 ppm Carbon Dioxide and Temperature

7 2050 550 ppm Carbon Dioxide and Temperature

8 “Business as Usual” 950 ppm Carbon Dioxide and Temperature

9 ? “Business as Usual” 950 ppm

10 http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/img/climate/research/2007/ann/globalhttp://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/img/climate/research/2007/ann/global-jan-dec-error-bar-pg.gif

11 Source: IPCC, 2001: Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis

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13 IPCC Fourth Assessment Report Summary for Policy Makers

14 http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/img/climate/research/2007/ann/glob-jan-dec-error-bar-pg.gif

15 Natural and anthropogenic contributions to global temperature change (Meehl et al., 2004). Observed values from Jones and Moberg 2001. Grey bands indicate 68% and 95% range derived from multiple simulations.

16 Natural cycles

17 Natural and anthropogenic contributions to global temperature change (Meehl et al., 2004). Observed values from Jones and Moberg 2001. Grey bands indicate 68% and 95% range derived from multiple simulations. Not Natural

18 Source: Jerry Meehl, National Center for Atmospheric Research

19 IPCC Fourth Assessment Report Summary for Policy Makers Reduced Consumption Energy intensive Energy conserving

20 IPCC Fourth Assessment Report Summary for Policy Makers The planet is committed to a warming over the next 50 years regardless of political decisions Energy intensive Energy conserving Reduced Consumption

21 IPCC Fourth Assessment Report Summary for Policy Makers Reduced Consumption Energy intensive Energy conserving Adaptation Necessary Mitigation Possible

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24 Suitability Index for Rainfed Agriculture IPCC 2007

25 Suitability Index for Rainfed Agriculture IPCC 2007

26 Projected changes in precipitation between 1980-1999 and 2080- 2099 for an energy- conserving scenario of greenhouse gas emissions IPCC 2007

27 Projected Changes* for the Climate of the Midwest Temperature *Estimated from IPCC reports

28 Projected Changes* for the Climate of the Midwest Precipitation *Estimated from IPCC reports

29 Projected Changes* for the Climate of the Midwest Other *Estimated from IPCC and CCSP reports

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31 Gu, et al, 2008: The 2007 eastern US spring freeze: Increased cold damage in a warming world? Bioscience 58 (3), 261-270. 2007 April Freeze Event

32 Gu, et al, 2008: The 2007 eastern US spring freeze: Increased cold damage in a warming world? Bioscience 58 (3), 261-270. 2007 April Freeze Event

33 Gu, et al, 2008: The 2007 eastern US spring freeze: Increased cold damage in a warming world? Bioscience 58 (3), 261-270. 2007 April Freeze Event

34 Gu, et al, 2008: The 2007 eastern US spring freeze: Increased cold damage in a warming world? Bioscience 58 (3), 261-270. 2007 April Freeze Event

35 Gu, et al, 2008: The 2007 eastern US spring freeze: Increased cold damage in a warming world? Bioscience 58 (3), 261-270. 2007 April Freeze Event

36 Summary Climate change since the 1970s cannot be explained onthe basis of natural variation alone (consensus) Greenhouse gases emitted from burning fossil fuelsaccount for more than half of the current warming(consensus) The warming already introduced will persist for morethan a century (consensus) Corn production will encounter some benefits andnumerous challenges (my assessment based onconsensus) The US Midwest likely will suffer less adverse effects ofclimate change than many other major rain-fedagricultural areas (my assessment based on consensus)


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