Authors
Rachel Licker, Matt Johnston, Jonathan A Foley, Carol Barford, Christopher J Kucharik, Chad Monfreda, Navin Ramankutty
Publication date
2010/11
Journal
Global ecology and biogeography
Volume
19
Issue
6
Pages
769-782
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Aim  As the demands for food, feed and fuel increase in coming decades, society will be pressed to increase agricultural production – whether by increasing yields on already cultivated lands or by cultivating currently natural areas – or to change current crop consumption patterns. In this analysis, we consider where yields might be increased on existing croplands, and how crop yields are constrained by biophysical (e.g. climate) versus management factors.
Location  This study was conducted at the global scale.
Methods  Using spatial datasets, we compare yield patterns for the 18 most dominant crops within regions of similar climate. We use this comparison to evaluate the potential yield obtainable for each crop in different climates around the world. We then compare the actual yields currently being achieved for each crop with their ‘climatic potential yield’ to estimate the ‘yield gap’.
Results  We present …
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