Guilpart Nicolas, Grassini Patricio, Sadras Victor O, Timsina Jagadish, Cassman Kenneth G
Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, USA.
AgroParisTech, UMR Agronomie 211 INRA AgroParisTech Université Paris-Saclay, F-78850 Thiverval-Grignon, France.
Field Crops Res. 2017 May;206:21-32. doi: 10.1016/j.fcr.2017.02.008.
Yield gap analyses of individual crops have been used to estimate opportunities for increasing crop production at local to global scales, thus providing information crucial to food security. However, increases in crop production can also be achieved by improving cropping system yield through modification of spatial and temporal arrangement of individual crops. In this paper we define the cropping system yield potential as the output from the combination of crops that gives the highest energy yield per unit of land and time, and the cropping system yield gap as the difference between actual energy yield of an existing cropping system and the cropping system yield potential. Then, we provide a framework to identify alternative cropping systems which can be evaluated against the current ones. A proof-of-concept is provided with irrigated rice-maize systems at four locations in Bangladesh that represent a range of climatic conditions in that country. The proposed framework identified (i) realistic alternative cropping systems at each location, and (ii) two locations where expected improvements in crop production from changes in cropping intensity (number of crops per year) were 43% to 64% higher than from improving the management of individual crops within the current cropping systems. The proposed framework provides a tool to help assess food production capacity of new systems ( with increased cropping intensity) arising from climate change, and assess resource requirements (water and N) and associated environmental footprint per unit of land and production of these new systems. By expanding yield gap analysis from individual crops to the cropping system level and applying it to new systems, this framework could also be helpful to bridge the gap between yield gap analysis and cropping/farming system design.
对单一作物的产量差距分析已被用于估计在地方到全球尺度上提高作物产量的机会,从而为粮食安全提供至关重要的信息。然而,通过改变单一作物的空间和时间安排来提高种植系统的产量,也能够实现作物产量的增加。在本文中,我们将种植系统产量潜力定义为单位土地和时间内能量产量最高的作物组合的产出,并将种植系统产量差距定义为现有种植系统的实际能量产量与种植系统产量潜力之间的差异。然后,我们提供了一个框架,用于识别可以与当前种植系统进行比较评估的替代种植系统。在孟加拉国代表该国一系列气候条件的四个地点,对灌溉水稻-玉米系统进行了概念验证。所提出的框架确定了:(i)每个地点切实可行的替代种植系统,以及(ii)两个地点,在这些地点,种植强度(每年作物数量)变化带来的作物产量预期提高比当前种植系统内改善单一作物管理带来的提高高出43%至64%。所提出的框架提供了一种工具,有助于评估气候变化带来的新系统(种植强度增加)的粮食生产能力,并评估这些新系统的资源需求(水和氮)以及单位土地和产量的相关环境足迹。通过将产量差距分析从单一作物扩展到种植系统层面并应用于新系统,该框架也有助于弥合产量差距分析与种植/耕作系统设计之间的差距。