Publications by authors named "Sara Minoli"

Article Synopsis
  • Lack of nitrogen in poor countries hampers food production, while excess nitrogen in industrialized nations breaches environmental limits.
  • A global crop model study shows that redistributing nitrogen inputs can potentially double cereal production in food-insecure areas and boost global output by 12% without major regional losses.
  • The research outlines strategies to redistribute nitrogen use effectively, aiming to improve food security while maintaining ecological balance.
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Land conservation and increased carbon uptake on land are fundamental to achieving the ambitious targets of the climate and biodiversity conventions. Yet, it remains largely unknown how such ambitions, along with an increasing demand for agricultural products, could drive landscape-scale changes and affect other key regulating nature's contributions to people (NCP) that sustain land productivity outside conservation priority areas. By using an integrated, globally consistent modelling approach, we show that ambitious carbon-focused land restoration action and the enlargement of protected areas alone may be insufficient to reverse negative trends in landscape heterogeneity, pollination supply, and soil loss.

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Adaptive management of crop growing periods by adjusting sowing dates and cultivars is one of the central aspects of crop production systems, tightly connected to local climate. However, it is so far underrepresented in crop-model based assessments of yields under climate change. In this study, we integrate models of farmers' decision making with biophysical crop modeling at the global scale to simulate crop calendars adaptation and its effect on crop yields of maize, rice, sorghum, soybean and wheat.

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Article Synopsis
  • Potential climate change will negatively affect future crop yields, particularly for maize, soybean, and rice, with new projections showing significant declines in productivity.
  • Previous models anticipated slight increases or minor declines, but updated simulations suggest much larger decreases for these crops.
  • On the other hand, wheat is expected to see improved yields due to increased CO2 levels, with notable climate impacts emerging earlier than expected, before 2040 in key agricultural regions.
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Modern food production is spatially concentrated in global "breadbaskets." A major unresolved question is whether these peak production regions will shift poleward as the climate warms, allowing some recovery of potential climate-related losses. While agricultural impacts studies to date have focused on currently cultivated land, the Global Gridded Crop Model Intercomparison Project (GGCMI) Phase 2 experiment allows us to assess changes in both yields and the location of peak productivity regions under warming.

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Climate change affects global agricultural production and threatens food security. Faster phenological development of crops due to climate warming is one of the main drivers for potential future yield reductions. To counter the effect of faster maturity, adapted varieties would require more heat units to regain the previous growing period length.

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Article Synopsis
  • Wheat grain protein concentration is crucial for nutrition but often overlooked in crop production improvements.
  • A study using a multi-model ensemble predicts that while increased CO levels might initially boost wheat yields, rising temperatures and altered rainfall patterns will likely negate these benefits, especially in low-rainfall areas.
  • Adapting wheat genotypes to warmer conditions could increase overall yields but may lead to a decrease in grain protein concentration, highlighting the challenge of balancing quantity and quality in wheat production amid climate change.
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Efforts to limit global warming to below 2°C in relation to the pre-industrial level are under way, in accordance with the 2015 Paris Agreement. However, most impact research on agriculture to date has focused on impacts of warming >2°C on mean crop yields, and many previous studies did not focus sufficiently on extreme events and yield interannual variability. Here, with the latest climate scenarios from the Half a degree Additional warming, Prognosis and Projected Impacts (HAPPI) project, we evaluated the impacts of the 2015 Paris Agreement range of global warming (1.

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A recent innovation in assessment of climate change impact on agricultural production has been to use crop multimodel ensembles (MMEs). These studies usually find large variability between individual models but that the ensemble mean (e-mean) and median (e-median) often seem to predict quite well. However, few studies have specifically been concerned with the predictive quality of those ensemble predictors.

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