Emerging Extreme Climate-Related Stresses Over Croplands and Wheat-Harvested Areas in the Southern Mediterranean Region During the 21st Century

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From Behnam Mirgol, PhD Student, Centre for Agroecology, Water, and Resilience

Abstract: The frequency and intensity of extreme weather events have noticeably risen in recent decades across the globe, especially over the southern Mediterranean region. This trend poses a threat to plant growth, affecting both the physical and metabolic aspects of plants. With the global necessity to double food production by 2050 to meet growing population demands and changing diets, it becomes crucial to understand further how and when significant changes affecting multiple climate-stress indicators may emerge over croplands and some strategic crops for the southern Mediterranean region, such as wheat.

This paper, therefore, aims to identify the spatial distributions and timings of significant positive and negative climate-related stresses affecting croplands and wheatlands. Using 17 bias-corrected climate models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 6 (CMIP6) under the SSP370 scenario, we examine a series of agronomically-relevant climate indicators, characterising the intensity of heatwave, coldwave, drought, and heavy rainfall, as well as the frequency of such event to combine at the annual scale and during the reproductive phase of winter wheat. Using observed and projected land-use land-cover scenarios, we then quantify the fraction of croplands and wheat-harvested areas that could potentially be affected by positive and negative changes in these climate-stress indicators.

Overall, our analysis revealed predominantly consistent upward trends in heatwave intensity, maximum drought intensity, and the occurrence of compound Dry and Hot (DH) events expected to emerge in the early future (before 2030). Similarly, the number of Wet and Hot (WH) events exhibits an increasing trend, although not as uniform as the indicators above, and is expected to emerge predominantly in the mid-future (before 2050). Conversely, maximum frost intensity, the number of Wet and Cold (WC) and Dry and Cold (DC) events reveal consistent declining trends over the region emerging mostly in the early future (before 2030). 

Biography: I am a PhD student with a strong interest in understanding how climate variability and change affect agriculture sector. My research focuses on assessing the impacts of climate change on agricultural productivity and practices in the southern Mediterranean region, and on developing adaptation strategies to offset its negative impacts.

Through my research, I aim to improve our understanding of the complex interactions between climate, crops, and socio-economic factors, and to identify practical solutions to help farmers and policymakers cope with climate change. By combining cutting-edge modelling techniques with field data and stakeholder engagement, I strive to produce research that is both scientifically rigorous and socially relevant.

I am committed to sharing my research findings and collaborating with other researchers in the field. I believe that interdisciplinary approaches and cross-cultural perspectives are key to addressing the complex challenges of climate change and food security, and I am eager to contribute to this collective effort.