Champaign, Illinois
June 29, 2006
By James Kloeppel, Science
Editor
University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
Open-air field trials involving
five major food crops grown under carbon-dioxide levels
projected for the future are harvesting dramatically less bounty
than those raised in earlier greenhouse and other enclosed test
conditions – and scientists warn that global food supplies could
be at risk without changes in production strategies.
The new findings are based on on-going open-air research at the
University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign and results gleaned from five other
temperate-climate locations around the world. According to the
analysis, published in the June 30 issue of the journal Science,
crop yields are running at about 50 percent below conclusions
drawn previously from enclosed test conditions.
Results from the open-field experiments, using Free-Air
Concentration Enrichment (FACE) technology, “indicate a much
smaller CO2 fertilization effect on yield than currently assumed
for C3 crops, such as rice, wheat and soybeans, and possibly
little or no stimulation for C4 crops that include maize and
sorghum,” said Stephen P. Long, a U. of I. plant biologist and
crop scientist.
FACE technology, such as the SoyFACE project at Illinois, allows
researchers to grow crops in open-air fields, with elevated
levels of carbon dioxide simulating the composition of the
atmosphere projected for the year 2050. SoyFACE has added a
unique element by introducing surface-level ozone, which also is
rising. Ozone is toxic to plants. SoyFACE is the first facility
in the world to test both the effects of future ozone and CO2
levels on crops in the open air.
Older, closed-condition studies occurred in greenhouses,
controlled environmental chambers and transparent field
chambers, in which carbon dioxide or ozone were easily retained
and controlled.
Such tests provided projections for maize, rice, sorghum,
soybean and wheat – the world’s most important crops in terms of
global grain production.
By 2050 carbon dioxide levels may be about 1.5 times greater
than the current 380 parts per million, while daytime ozone
levels during the growing season could peak on average at 80
parts per billion (now 60 parts per billion).
Older studies, as reviewed by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, suggest that increased soil temperature and
decreased soil moisture, which would reduce crop yields, likely
will be offset in C3 crops by the fertilization effect of rising
CO2, primarily because CO2 increases photosynthesis and
decreases crop water use.
Although more than 340 independent chamber studies have been
analyzed to project yields under rising CO2 levels, most plants
grown in enclosures can differ greatly from those grown in farm
fields, Long said. FACE has been the only technology that has
tested effects in real-world situations, and, to date, for each
crop tested yields have been “well below (about half) the value
predicted from chambers,” the authors reported. The results
encompassed grain yield, total biomass and effects on
photosynthesis.
The FACE data came from experimental wheat and sorghum fields at
Maricopa, Ariz.; grasslands at Eschikon, Switzerland; managed
pasture at Bulls, New Zealand; rice at Shizukuishi, Japan; and
soybean and corn crops at Illinois. In three key production
measures, involving four crops, the authors wrote, just one of
12 factors scrutinized is not lower than chamber equivalents,
Long said.
“The FACE experiments clearly show that much lower CO2
fertilization factors should be used in model projections of
future yields,” the researchers said. They also called for
research to examine simultaneous changes in CO2, O3, temperature
and soil moisture.”
While projections to 2050 may be too far out for commercial
considerations, they added, “it must not be seen as too far in
the future for public sector research and development, given the
long lead times that may be needed to avoid global food
shortage.”
Long and four colleagues were co-authors: Elizabeth A.
Ainsworth, professor of plant biology; Andrew D.B. Leakey,
research fellow in the
Institute of Genomic Biology at Illinois; Donald R. Ort,
professor of plant biology and crops sciences; and Josef
Nösberger, professor at the Swiss Federal Institute of Science
and Technology in Zurich. Long, Ainsworth and Ort also are
affiliated with the Institute for Genomic Biology, and Ainsworth
and Ort also are scientists in the USDA-ARS Photosynthesis
Research Unit on the Illinois campus.
The Illinois Council for Food and Agricultural Research, Archer
Daniels Midland Co., the USDA and U. of I. Experiment Station
funded the research.
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