Evaluation of climate change impacts and adaptation strategies for maize cultivation in the Himalayan foothills of India

Author:

Deb Proloy1,Kiem Anthony S.1,Babel Mukand S.2,Chu Sang Thi3,Chakma Biplab4

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Water, Climate and Land Use (CWCL), Faculty of Science and Information Technology, School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, Newcastle 2308, Australia

2. Water Engineering and Management, School of Engineering and Technology, Asian Institute of Technology, P.O. Box 4 Klong Luang, Pathumthani 12120, Thailand

3. Department of Forestry, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, No. 2, Ngoc Ha, Ba Dinh, Ha Noi, Vietnam

4. Department of Soil and Water Engineering, College of Agricultural Engineering and Post-Harvest Technology, Ranipool, East Sikkim 737135, India

Abstract

This study evaluates the impacts of climate change on rainfed maize (Zea mays) yield and evaluates different agro-adaptation measures to counteract its negative impacts at Sikkim, a Himalayan state of India. Future climate scenarios for the 10 years centered on 2025, 2055 and 2085 were obtained by downscaling the outputs of the HadCM3 General Circulation Model (GCM) under for A2 and B2 emission scenarios. HadCM3 was chosen after assessing the performance analysis of six GCMs for the study region. The daily maximum and minimum temperatures are projected to rise in the future and precipitation is projected to decrease (by 1.7 to 22.6% relative to the 1991–2000 baseline) depending on the time period and scenarios considered. The crop simulation model CERES-Maize was then used to simulate maize yield under future climate change for the future time windows. Simulation results show that climate change could reduce maize productivity by 10.7–18.2%, compared to baseline yield, under A2 and 6.4–12.4% under B2 scenarios. However, the results also indicate that the projected decline in maize yield could be offset by early planting of seeds, lowering the farm yard manure application rate, introducing supplementary irrigation and shifting to heat tolerant varieties of maize.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Atmospheric Science,Water Science and Technology,Global and Planetary Change

Reference75 articles.

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