Atmospheric CO2 fertilization effects on biomass yields of 10 crops in northern Germany

2015 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Atmospheric CO2 fertilization effects on biomass yields of 10 crops in northern Germany​
Degener, J. F.​ (2015) 
Frontiers in Environmental Science3 art. 48​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2015.00048 

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Authors
Degener, Jan F.
Abstract
The quality and quantity of the influence that atmospheric CO2 has on crop growth is still a matter of debate. This study's aim is to estimate if [CO2] will have an effect on biomass yields at all, to quantify and spatially locate the effects and to explore if an elevated photosynthesis rate or water-use-efficiency is predominantly responsible. This study uses a numerical carbon-based crop model (BioSTAR) to estimate biomass yields within the administrative boundaries of Niedersachsen in Northern Germany. Ten crops are included (winter grains: wheat, barley, rye, triticale—early, medium, late maize variety—sunflower, sorghum, spring wheat), modeled annually for the entire twenty-first century on 91,014 separate sites. Modeling was conducted twice, once with an annually adapted [CO2] concentration according to the SRES-A1B scenario and once with a fixed concentration of 390 ppm to separate the influence of [CO2] from that of the other input variables. Rising [CO2] concentrations will play a central role in keeping future yields of all crops above or around today's level. Differences in yields between modeling with fixed or adapted [CO2] can be as high as 60% toward the century's end. Generally, yields will increase when [CO2] rises and decline when it is kept constant. As C4-crops are equivalently affected it is presumed that an elevated efficiency in water use is the main responsible factor for all plants.
Issue Date
2015
Journal
Frontiers in Environmental Science 
ISSN
2296-665X
Language
English

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