Arable crop disease control, climate change and food security

Fitt, Bruce D.L., Evans, Neal, Gladders, P., Hughes, David, Jeger, M.J., Turner, J.A. and West, Jon S. (2011) Arable crop disease control, climate change and food security. In: Crop Protection in Southern Britain, 2011-02-23 - 2011-02-24.
Copy

Global food security is threatened by crop diseases that account for average yield losses of 16%. Climate change is exacerbating threats to food security in much of the world, emphasising the need to increase food production in northern European countries such as the UK. However, to mitigate climate change, crops must be grown so as to minimise greenhouse gas emissions (GHG); results with UK oilseed rape demonstrate how disease control in arable crops can contribute to climate change mitigation. However, work examining impacts of climate change on UK epidemics of winter oilseed rape diseases illustrates unexpected, contrasting impacts of climate change on complex plant-disease interactions. In England, phoma stem canker is expected to become more severe whilst light leaf spot is expected to become less severe. Such work can provide guidance for government and industry planning for adaptation to impacts of climate change on crops to ensure future food security


picture_as_pdf
905321.pdf
subject
Submitted Version

View Download

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core RIOXX2 XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span OpenURL ContextObject METS HTML Citation ASCII Citation Data Cite XML MODS MPEG-21 DIDL
Export

Downloads