AI Article Synopsis

  • - The Nordic countries face unique agricultural challenges due to their northern climate, resulting in short growing seasons and the need for frost-tolerant crops, made even more complex by climate change effects like micro-droughts and expanding pests.
  • - To adapt, it's important to develop crop varieties that thrive in these conditions, including leveraging nutritious wild crops, which can help meet both current and future agricultural production needs due to potentially longer growing seasons.
  • - Enhancing the adaptive capacity of crops through innovative crop management and functional phenomics approaches—such as high-throughput phenotyping and bioinformatics—is essential for supporting Nordic agriculture and addressing climate change impacts.

Article Abstract

The five Nordic countries span the most northern region for field cultivation in the world. This presents challenges per se, with short growing seasons, long days, and a need for frost tolerance. Climate change has additionally increased risks for micro-droughts and water logging, as well as pathogens and pests expanding northwards. Thus, Nordic agriculture demands crops that are adapted to the specific Nordic growth conditions and future climate scenarios. A focus on crop varieties and traits important to Nordic agriculture, including the unique resource of nutritious wild crops, can meet these needs. In fact, with a future longer growing season due to climate change, the region could contribute proportionally more to global agricultural production. This also applies to other northern regions, including the Arctic. To address current growth conditions, mitigate impacts of climate change, and meet market demands, the adaptive capacity of crops that both perform well in northern latitudes and are more climate resilient has to be increased, and better crop management systems need to be built. This requires functional phenomics approaches that integrate versatile high-throughput phenotyping, physiology, and bioinformatics. This review stresses key target traits, the opportunities of latitudinal studies, and infrastructure needs for phenotyping to support Nordic agriculture.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9440434PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erac246DOI Listing

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