![]() |
||
|
|
||
|
May
1, 2007 Rice farming in "Agriculture is
central to
human survival and is probably the human enterprise most vulnerable to
changes
in climate," said lead author Rosamond Naylor, director of the Program
on
Food Security and the Environment at Stanford. "This is particularly
true
in countries such as Hungry Season In the study, the
researchers
looked at the impact of climate on Indonesian rice farming since 1983. The researchers
found that rice
production since 1983 has been greatly affected by year-to-year climate
variability-especially El Niño/Southern Oscillation events,
which occur in the "During a bad El
Niño event,
farmers literally wait months before they can plant their crop,
resulting in a
harvest that is months late and often much smaller in size," Naylor
said. Climate
Change After analyzing the
recent
record, the researchers focused on how climate change could affect
rainfall and
agriculture in "Most models predict
that
the rains will come later in Indonesia, that it will rain a little
harder once
the monsoon begins and then it will really dry up during the summer
months," said study co-author David Battisti, an atmospheric scientist
at
the University of Washington. "So While the study did
not address
how climate change could affect the frequency or intensity of El
Niño events in
the future, the authors concluded that even if there were no changes in
the
current El Niño pattern, Indonesian rice growers will face a
significantly
shortened rainy season. In the absence of adaptive measures, rice
growers could
suffer greatly, they said. Adapting
for Change What adaptive
measures could be
taken in the face of harmful short-term variability and long-term
change in
climate? "In the short run,
the
science of El Niño prediction has advanced to the point that
reasonably
high-confidence forecasts are available at least two seasons in
advance,"
said study co-author Marshall Burke, manager of the Program on Food
Security
and the Environment. "We have developed a forecasting model that's now
being used by the Indonesian Agricultural Ministry to anticipate and
plan for
El Niño events and their effects on agriculture." The authors also are
working with
Indonesian officials to develop longer-run strategies that address the
anticipated effects of climate change on agriculture in the country.
"Such
strategies could include investments in water storage, development of
drought-tolerant crops and crop diversification for those farmers at
greatest
risk," Burke added. "To our knowledge,
our study
is the first climate-agriculture study that uses projections from all
available
global climate models to look at climate effects in a specific region,"
Battisti said. "Thus, more than past efforts, our study captures the
range
of uncertainty across different projections of future climate,
knowledge which
will be crucial for long-run thinking about how to respond." Added Naylor: "From
a
scientific perspective, it's imperative that we now replicate this kind
of
study elsewhere in order to start building a more complete picture of
the
effects of climate change on agriculture." The researchers are
conducting
a similar study in
Recommend this Article to a Friend Back to: News |
|
Subscribe to the Earth Observatory About the Earth Observatory Contact Us Privacy Policy and Important Notices Responsible NASA Official: Lorraine A. Remer Webmaster: Goran Halusa We're a part of the Science Mission Directorate |