New Delhi: Using data over 60 years, scientists have examined how deviations in weather from long-term averages affected the yields of three major cereal crops of India - rice, maize and wheat. The researchers from University of Illinois, US, found that farmers were able to adapt to changes in temperature for rice and maize but not wheat. However, increased precipitation enhanced rice yield, but adversely affected wheat and maize yields.
"We also found that farmers are customizing their strategies across different regions and crops. For example, heat-prone districts fared better to higher temperatures compared to districts in colder regions," said Madhu Khanna, a professor of agriculture and consumer economics and corresponding author on this study. The study has been published in the journal Agricultural Economics.
The researchers also found that farmers who worked in areas that were less productive, and therefore at the lower tail of distribution, differed in their response to those who worked in areas where the yields were higher - the former took more adaptation measures due to higher impacts.
"Higher productive regions have better irrigation facilities and are less dependent on the monsoon, and so the difference between long-term and short-term impacts is negligible," said Surender Kumar, a professor of economics at the University of Delhi, India. The researchers used quantile regression statistical models to determine if farmers were adapting to the long-term changes in climate. To do so, they used 60-year data sets on temperature, precipitation, the length of the growing season, and crop yield to create different models for short-term and long-term responses of crops.