Concurrent Precipitation Extremes Modulate the Response of Rice Transplanting Date to Preseason Temperature Extremes in China

Author:

Liu Yiqing1234,Liu Weihang1234,Li Yan15ORCID,Ye Tao1234ORCID,Chen Shuo1234,Li Zitong1234,Sun Ran12346

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Earth Surface Processes and Resource Ecology (ESPRE) Beijing Normal University Beijing China

2. Key Laboratory of Environmental Change and Natural Disasters Ministry of Education Beijing Normal University Beijing China

3. Academy of Disaster Reduction and Emergency Management Ministry of Emergency Management and Ministry of Education Beijing China

4. Faculty of Geographical Science Beijing Normal University Beijing China

5. Institute of Land Surface System and Sustainable Development Faculty of Geographical Sciences Beijing Normal University Beijing China

6. The College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Central China Normal University Wuhan China

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding how crop phenology responds to climate change is critical for enabling agricultural adaptation measures. Pre‐season temperature alone leads to well‐understood changes in crop phenology. Nevertheless, the modulation effect of concurrent precipitation extremes on the response to temperature extremes has been largely under‐addressed. Here, we investigate the response of rice transplanting dates to pre‐season temperature extremes and reveal the modulation effects of concurrent precipitation extremes by using station‐observed rice transplanting dates from 1981 to 2018 across mainland China. We also evaluate the performance of a remotely sensed phenology product, ChinaCropPhen1km, in reproducing the above temperature responses and modulation effects. Our results showed that transplanting dates tended to advance in response to an extremely hot pre‐season, while concurrent extreme drought offset the advance by up to 2.6 days. Transplanting dates tended to be delayed in response to an extremely cold pre‐season, while concurrent extreme precipitation exacerbated the delay by up to 1 day. Responses to temperature extremes and modulation effects were divergent across different regions. Under extremely hot conditions, transplanting dates advanced further in hotter and wetter regions, while under extremely cold pre‐seasons, transplanting dates delayed less in colder and drier regions. Transplanting dates from the ChinaCropPhen1km product underestimated the responses to temperature extremes by up to 4.7 days and detected the opposite modulation effect compared to those obtained from observations. Our results highlight that the need to improve our understanding and modeling of modulation effects of precipitation extremes on temperature–phenology relationship, which benefits the field of agriculture risk analysis and climate change adaptation.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science

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