USA - Growth in frequency of dry, hot and windy conditions harm wheat yield

21.12.2022 718 views

The compounding influence of adverse dry, hot and windy climate patterns slashed wheat yield 4% in Kansas and five other Great Plains states over the past 40 years, Kansas State University researchers reported in the scientific journal Nature Communications.

Xiaomao Lin, professor of agricultural climatology, said the study was the first to quantify a connection between change in the nation’s climate and wheat production. The simultaneous combination of low relative humidity with high temperatures and strong winds were shown to be a negative climate risk in terms of yields.

He said the number of hot-dry-windy events – otherwise known as HDWs – that undermine yield significantly ramped up in the U.S. Great Plains. The study focused on an El Nino-like pattern’s influence on wheat production from 1982 to 2020 in Nebraska, Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, South Dakota and Kansas.

“The HDW events were the most impactful drivers for winter wheat loss,” Lin said. “As climates change, temperature and precipitation are heading in opposite directions over the U.S. Great Plains. Irregular droughts and expanded croplands are driving growing environmental problems, such as frequent dust storms. Greenhouse gases are making heat waves more frequent.”

University researchers developed a statistical model that examined per-county winter wheat yields and information on combinations of hot, dry and windy events during different plant growth stages, years and locations. They also took into account improvements of crop breeding and field crop management.

The findings of Kansas State researchers would be important to farmers striving to understand how climate change could disrupt crop yields and whether those conditions were expected to increase in intensity or frequency.

“Future climate change threats will depend on greenhouse gas emissions and pathways that are implemented to mitigate them, such as burning less fossil fuel and adjusting climate-informed planting dates and cultivars,” said Lin, the agricultural climatologist. “It will be important to develop climate-resilient agricultural practices.”

Fourteen researchers involved with the Nature Communications article set out to study whether HDW variables had increased in the Great Plains.

Hot, dry and windy events were linked across the U.S. winter wheat belt, but the main affected areas were in southwest Kansas and the panhandle areas of Oklahoma and Texas. This aligned with locations where the Dust Bowl was prominent in the 1930s, said Haidong Zhao, a doctoral student in agronomy and the article’s lead author.

Raj Khosla, head of Kansas State’s agronomy department, said the study was “a testament of complex, multi-disciplinary work our faculty are accomplishing to assist our farmers in understanding wicked climate patterns and challenges related to climate, and how they can prepare themselves and their operations to respond to such challenges.”

Source - https://kansasreflector.com

05.05.2026

Climate change: challenges and opportunities for crop insurance in Canada

The pandemic we have just come out of reminded us of the importance of maintaining robust food sovereignty in our country, provinces and cities. 

05.05.2026

Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan hold talks on agro-industrial collaboration

On May 5, Minister of Agriculture Majnun Mammadov met with a delegation from Uzbekistan led by Minister of Agriculture Ibrokhim Abdurakhmonov, who attended the 19th Azerbaijan International Agricultural Exhibition (Caspian Agro Week), to discuss bilateral cooperation in the agricultural sector, Trend reports.

05.05.2026

Philippines - P6.69-million crop damage logged in Albay due to Mayon unrest

Damage to crops from Mayon Volcano’s unrest has reached P6.69 million, with ashfall affecting several farmers in Albay, authorities said Tuesday.

05.05.2026

Cyprus - Farmers in Karpasia seek compensation for crop damage caused by wild donkeys

Losses reported in Rizokarpaso and nearby villages as donkey population grows and destroys farmland.

05.05.2026

USA - USDA Risk Management Agency Upgrades Rainfall Data Source

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Risk Management Agency (RMA) is upgrading the source for rainfall data used in several Federal crop insurance programs, moving from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Prediction Center (CPC) to the National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). 

05.05.2026

Asparagus losses in Norfolk County, Canada reach 98 percent after frost

Frost events in Canada recently caused crop damage in Norfolk County, with asparagus production heavily affected. At Dalton White Farms, losses reached up to 98 per cent of the field.

04.05.2026

Bulgaria's Kyustendil cherry crop severely affected by frost for second consecutive year

Frosts have caused critical damage to cherry orchards in the Kyustendil region of Bulgaria for the second consecutive spring, with producers reporting near-total crop losses. 

04.05.2026

Vietnam - MoF moves to expand farm insurance support and eligibility

The Ministry of Finance has proposed sharply increasing agricultural insurance premium subsidies to up to 95 per cent and widening the pool of eligible beneficiaries to better share risks with producers, stabilise farm incomes, and strengthen climate resilience.