Originally posted by dmlfarmer
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Alberta Climate Records
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
-
Originally posted by furrowtickler View Posta video that most should understand about climate change and its driving forces over time ...
youtu.be/8_rb98g0jwULast edited by furrowtickler; Nov 10, 2021, 22:57.
Comment
-
https://changingclimate.ca/regional-perspectives/chapter/4-0/
Chapter 4
Prairie Provinces
This chapter discusses climate change impacts and approaches to adaptation across the three Prairies Provinces.
Climate change has both direct and indirect impacts on agriculture in the Prairie provinces, resulting in both risks and opportunities (Kulshreshtha and Wheaton, 2013). Changing precipitation, temperatures, carbon dioxide levels and other variables will affect the following: crop and pasture productivity, quality and nutrient cycling; weeds, insects and diseases; and livestock production and reproductive rates (Sudmeyer et al., 2016). Projected biophysical impacts include increased water scarcity, more frequent extreme precipitation events, shifting and variable precipitation patterns, longer growing seasons, increasing heat units (i.e., a measure of crop development in relation to temperature), and more frequent and intense droughts (e.g., Bonsal et al., 2019; Kulshreshtha and Wheaton, 2013).
Certain crop yields and hay productivity may increase in the near term in response to climate factors, such as longer growing seasons and increased heat units (see Box 4.3). However, high temperatures, droughts and more variable precipitation negatively affect crop yields, particularly for canola and wheat (Qian et al., 2018; Meng et al., 2017). Increased exposure to high temperatures (e.g., over 30°C), especially at critical times, may also reduce yields of corn, soybean, canola and wheat (Schauberger et al., 2017; Meng et al., 2017).
Comment
-
Have to agree again Chuck.
Looks like if we adapt as usual it will be a net benefit in our region.
Comment
-
Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostDml, you bring up some really good points.
But you will have to remind me, when did the narrative of the climate change alarmists go from proclaiming that agricultural production would decline precipitously, to stating that farmers would innovate and take advantage of improving conditions and continue to increase yields?
Because I must have missed that memo.
But why would you be surprised that farmers are adapting? Are you really surprised that farmers are adapting to improving conditions? When one limiting factor is eliminated, we will push the limits until the next limiting factor is reached then find a way to eliminate that one and on and on.
Starvation levels of CO2 have been a major limiting factor in recent centuries. Of course, as that input has beneficially increased, Farmers have taken advantage of that and increased fertility rates to match. Then water becomes limiting factor, so we are now applying water to more acres to reach the increased potential.
As the growing season gets longer, and heat units increase, crop varieties and species and high input production methods will and are following that trend. As you may have noticed, arable acres are not declining, in fact in spite of urban sprawl eating up productive farmland, worldwide acres under cultivation still continues to increase. And in spite of bringing in more marginal acres, yields continue their relentless increase.
I've put this challenge out before, find somewhere in the world, for some crop where production is declining not increasing to prove your theory.
You ask for an example of a crop where production is declining anywhere in the world. Almonds is one. Bananas are another, this one brought on by disease. Some will argue that the disease is a result of changing climate and the introduction of a new pest. I don't know. It is a chicken and egg question.
More importantly, go to Crop Yields - Our World in data https://ourworldindata.org/crop-yields#how-have-crop-yields-changed-since-1960 and you will find chart after chart of crops around the world showing yield trends. All show strong increases in production in the 20th century and then leveling off in the 21st? Why? Is it slowing of innovation and new varieities? have we maxed out fertillizers/pesticide effieicency? Government regulation? Adaptation? Or is climate changing? Or a mix of all of these factors?
But the most important feature to see in all these charts is the greatly increasing variability of yeilds year to year. Variability is a huge problem and it is increasing.
Back to perspective. The supply shortages of canola, wheat etc due to the past year's growing conditions and resultant boom in prices is great for farmers who were lucky enough to get a crop. But those high prices mean little to farmers who did not have a crop to harvest and in fact hurts even more given the increase in input costs due to companies basing pricing of inputs on posted grain prices. So are high crop prices always good? Only if you have a crop to sell.Last edited by dmlfarmer; Nov 11, 2021, 09:29.
Comment
-
Originally posted by chuckChuck View Posthttps://changingclimate.ca/regional-perspectives/chapter/4-0/
Chapter 4
Prairie Provinces
This chapter discusses climate change impacts and approaches to adaptation across the three Prairies Provinces.
Climate change has both direct and indirect impacts on agriculture in the Prairie provinces, resulting in both risks and opportunities (Kulshreshtha and Wheaton, 2013). Changing precipitation, temperatures, carbon dioxide levels and other variables will affect the following: crop and pasture productivity, quality and nutrient cycling; weeds, insects and diseases; and livestock production and reproductive rates (Sudmeyer et al., 2016). Projected biophysical impacts include increased water scarcity, more frequent extreme precipitation events, shifting and variable precipitation patterns, longer growing seasons, increasing heat units (i.e., a measure of crop development in relation to temperature), and more frequent and intense droughts (e.g., Bonsal et al., 2019; Kulshreshtha and Wheaton, 2013).
Certain crop yields and hay productivity may increase in the near term in response to climate factors, such as longer growing seasons and increased heat units (see Box 4.3). However, high temperatures, droughts and more variable precipitation negatively affect crop yields, particularly for canola and wheat (Qian et al., 2018; Meng et al., 2017). Increased exposure to high temperatures (e.g., over 30°C), especially at critical times, may also reduce yields of corn, soybean, canola and wheat (Schauberger et al., 2017; Meng et al., 2017).
Comment
-
Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
...Starvation levels of CO2 have been a major limiting factor in recent centuries....
I've put this challenge out before, find somewhere in the world, for some crop where production is declining not increasing to prove your theory.
Comment
-
Comment
-
Originally posted by furrowtickler View PostWhat do greenhouses pump into them from healthy increased productivity...... CO2 right ?Last edited by dmlfarmer; Nov 11, 2021, 14:06.
Comment
-
CO2 may be a proven factor but it’s effect on global climate is way over exaggerated.
To believe that humans alone are causing climate change is very far from reality .
Did you watch that video ?
Yes reducing emissions is a good thing, but its being politicized and abused as a wealth transfer scheme from the wealthy middle class to others Meanwhile the billionaires and elite will carry on with massive emissions and huge carbon footprints unabated.
What percentage of the climate effects are actually truly from CO2 and / or from natural activity from the sun . When that answer is truly understood then maybe people will understand weather and climate patterns better and realize the sun is main driver by far , always has been , and it’s not a tiny percentage of our CO2 in the atmosphere.
I just think there needs to be a much more balanced look and what we can control and what is natural cycles . High levels of CO2 did not cause the great warming periods in history , it was the suns activity and volcanic activity both in warm periods and glaciated periods.
It’s being over looked in a dramatic fashion with the current CO2 blame game . And it’s about to cost us all dearly carbon tax’s will do nothing but increase living expenses from the vast majority while the extreme wealthy minority will be 100% unaffected .
Comment
-
https://climate.nasa.gov/causes/
The above graph compares global surface temperature changes (red line) and the Sun's energy that Earth receives (yellow line) in watts (units of energy) per square meter since 1880. The lighter/thinner lines show the yearly levels while the heavier/thicker lines show the 11-year average trends. Eleven-year averages are used to reduce the year-to-year natural noise in the data, making the underlying trends more obvious.
The amount of solar energy that Earth receives has followed the Sun’s natural 11-year cycle of small ups and downs with no net increase since the 1950s. Over the same period, global temperature has risen markedly. It is therefore extremely unlikely that the Sun has caused the observed global temperature warming trend over the past half-century. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
It's reasonable to assume that changes in the Sun's energy output would cause the climate to change, since the Sun is the fundamental source of energy that drives our climate system.
Indeed, studies show that solar variability has played a role in past climate changes. For example, a decrease in solar activity coupled with an increase in volcanic activity is thought to have helped trigger the Little Ice Age between approximately 1650 and 1850, when Greenland cooled from 1410 to the 1720s and glaciers advanced in the Alps.
But several lines of evidence show that current global warming cannot be explained by changes in energy from the Sun:
Since 1750, the average amount of energy coming from the Sun either remained constant or increased slightly.
If the warming were caused by a more active Sun, then scientists would expect to see warmer temperatures in all layers of the atmosphere. Instead, they have observed a cooling in the upper atmosphere, and a warming at the surface and in the lower parts of the atmosphere. That's because greenhouse gases are trapping heat in the lower atmosphere.
Climate models that include solar irradiance changes can’t reproduce the observed temperature trend over the past century or more without including a rise in greenhouse gases.
Comment
-
"More floods, blizzards, droughts expected as Sask. warms 3 times faster than the rest of the world: report"
A new climate change report has found that Saskatchewan is warming three times faster than the rest of the world.
"Antarctica's last 6 months were the coldest on record"
From the article-"Earth's poles have warmed faster than anywhere else,....."
If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with BS
Comment
-
-
Why do scientists go on record as saying a certain location is warming faster than anywhere else?
Comment
-
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment