Climate change threatens rice harvest quality: Study
New research from Japan’s National Agriculture and Food Research Organization warns of significant declines in rice yields and quality due to global warming. A study in Tsukuba finds up to 35% yield decrease and 85% quality loss. Published in PNAS, it highlights CO2’s exacerbating effect. Using LED-lit growth chambers, researchers simulate climate impacts on rice plants. This aids in developing resilient varieties and curbing methane emissions in rice farming, crucial for future sustainability efforts.
Global warming is leading to smaller yields and poorer quality in rice crops, according to new research that suggests rice harvests could decrease by up to 35% and quality by up to 85% compared to plants in 1990s climate conditions.
A study by the Japanese National Agriculture and Food Research Organization in Tsukuba analyzing five Japanese rice varieties predicts strong global warming accelerates the life cycle of rice plants considerably and harms grain yield and quality.
The research, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), suggests that additional high CO2 concentration further worsened production compared to the high temperature alone.
To test how rice plants and the resulting rice harvest are affected by climate change, the researchers used an artificial growth chamber where environmental fluctuations were simulated with the help of high-performance LED lamps.
The growth chamber was fed with meteorological data from several years at different locations. Future climate scenarios altered by global warming were simulated for a region with a temperate climate such as Tsukuba in Japan.
This artificial environment could help to test the climate impact on other rice plants and develop varieties that are better able to cope with future environmental conditions, as well as help reduce methane production in rice cultivation, the researchers write.
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