Temperature thresholds of extreme heat-induced yield loss in maize and soybean reveal geographic heterogeneity across the Northern Hemisphere
ID:162 View Protection:ATTENDEE Updated Time:2026-03-26 23:31:01 Hits:197 Extended type 2

Start Time:2026-04-26 14:00(Asia/Shanghai)

Duration:20min

Session:S3-3 专题3.3 气候服务、农业减灾与粮食安全 » F18专题3.3 气候服务、农业减灾与粮食安全

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Abstract
Exposure to extreme high temperatures is a major constraint on global crop productivity, yet most large-scale assessments rely on fixed temperature thresholds that overlook regional variation in genetics, environment and management. Consequently, the temperature thresholds at which heat exposure begins to cause substantial yield loss and their spatial variability remain unclear. Here we compiled subnational yield census over Northern Hemisphere (20° N–55° N) and analysed the extreme degree days (EDDs) to estimate a data-driven critical threshold (EDDthreshold). Our findings reveal EDDthreshold for maize and soybean are 34.8 ± 4.0 °C and 33.7 ± 3.9 °C, respectively. In contrast, state-of-the-art crop models significantly underestimated EDDthreshold and its spatial variations, leading to overestimated extreme heat exposure, partially explaining their underestimate in yield loss during extreme heat events. We estimate that without adaptations, growing-season extreme heat exposure could increase by 2.4%–16.1% for maize and 4.9%–16.0% for soybean by the end of the century, and sowing-date adjustment alone cannot fully offset the projected increase in extreme heat exposure.
Keywords
Maize, heat, climate change
Speaker
王旭辉
研究员 北京大学

Submission Author
王旭辉 北京大学
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Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Apr 25

    2026

    to

    Apr 29

    2026

  • Apr 07 2026

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Jun 17 2026

    Registration deadline

Sponsored By
未来大气科学论坛理事会
Organized By
河海大学海洋学院
南京大学南京赫尔辛基大气与地球系统科学学院
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