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Diverse crops provide more stable yields

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Moving away from monocultures may help stabilise food supplies, according to US researchers. Over the past decade, drought and extreme heat have caused declines in grain yield in some of the world's largest agricultural regions, including Australia. Using 50 years of data, the researchers found crop diversity increased the stability of national yield across 91 countries and 176 crop species, which they say could help buffer against the increased variability expected with climate change.

Journal/conference: Nature

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41586-019-1316-y

Organisation/s: University of California Santa Barbara, USA

Funder: French National Research Agency, National Science Foundation.

Media Release

From: Springer Nature

Crop diversity increases crop stability

Greater crop diversity strongly increases the stability of the national annual yield, according to a paper published online this week in Nature.

Increasing global food demand, low grain reserves and climate change threaten the stability of food systems on national and global scales. During the past decade, drought and extreme heat caused grain yields to decline in some of the world’s major agricultural regions, including Australia, Russia and the United States. Policies to increase yields, irrigation and the tolerance of crops to drought have been proposed as stability-enhancing solutions.

One potential solution is the crop diversity–stability hypothesis, proposed by Delphine Renard and David Tilman. The authors examined the relationship between crop diversity and the stability of national yield using five decades of data on the annual yields of 176 crop species in 91 nations. They found that the temporal stability of national yield directly benefits from increased crop diversity. Small increases in stability, in turn, lead to greatly decreased probabilities of years with major national yield declines. The findings suggest that increasing the crop diversity of a nation could potentially counteract the effect of increased climatic variability.

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