GSTDTAP  > 资源环境科学
DOI10.1038/s41893-020-0505-x
The global cropland-sparing potential of high-yield farming
Folberth, Christian1; Khabarov, Nikolay1; Balkovic, Juraj1,2; Skalsky, Rastislav1,3; Visconti, Piero1; Ciais, Philippe4; Janssens, Ivan A.5; Penuelas, Josep6,7; Obersteiner, Michael1,8
2020-04-16
发表期刊NATURE SUSTAINABILITY
ISSN2398-9629
出版年2020
卷号3期号:4页码:281-289
文章类型Article
语种英语
国家Austria; Slovakia; France; Belgium; Spain; England
英文摘要

Agriculture has a massive and growing footprint. This study finds that optimizing fertilizer and major crops globally could reduce by 50% needed global cropland, allowing restored vegetation on spared land to sequester carbon.


The global expansion of cropland exerts substantial pressure on natural ecosystems and is expected to continue with population growth and affluent demand. Yet earlier studies indicated that crop production could be more than doubled if attainable crop yields were achieved on present cropland. Here we show on the basis of crop modelling that closing current yield gaps by spatially optimizing fertilizer inputs and allocating 16 major crops across global cropland would allow reduction of the cropland area required to maintain present production volumes by nearly 50% of its current extent. Enforcing a scenario abandoning cropland in biodiversity hotspots and uniformly releasing 20% of cropland area for other landscape elements would still enable reducing the cropland requirement by almost 40%. As a co-benefit, greenhouse gas emissions from fertilizer and paddy rice, as well as irrigation water requirements, are likely to decrease with a reduced area of cultivated land, while global fertilizer input requirements remain unchanged. Spared cropland would provide space for substantial carbon sequestration in restored natural vegetation. Only targeted sparing of biodiversity hotspots supports species with small-range habitats, while biodiversity would hardly profit from a maximum land-sparing approach.


领域资源环境
收录类别SCI-E ; SSCI
WOS记录号WOS:000526392900008
WOS关键词AGRICULTURAL INTENSIFICATION ; CLIMATE-CHANGE ; LAND-USE ; FOOD ; WATER ; NITROGEN ; MODEL ; SYSTEM ; BIODIVERSITY ; FLEXIBILITY
WOS类目Green & Sustainable Science & Technology ; Environmental Sciences ; Environmental Studies
WOS研究方向Science & Technology - Other Topics ; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
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文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/249324
专题资源环境科学
作者单位1.Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Ecosyst Serv & Management Program, Laxenburg, Austria;
2.Comenius Univ, Dept Soil Sci, Fac Nat Sci, Bratislava, Slovakia;
3.Natl Agr & Food Ctr, Soil Sci & Conservat Res Inst, Bratislava, Slovakia;
4.UVSQ Orme Merisiers, CNRS, CEA, Lab Sci Climat & Environm, Gif Sur Yvette, France;
5.Univ Antwerp, Dept Biol, Antwerp, Belgium;
6.UAB, CEAB, CREAF, CSIC,Global Ecol Unit, Bellaterra, Catalonia, Spain;
7.CREAF, Cerdanyola Del Valles, Catalonia, Spain;
8.Environm Change Inst, Oxford, England
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GB/T 7714
Folberth, Christian,Khabarov, Nikolay,Balkovic, Juraj,et al. The global cropland-sparing potential of high-yield farming[J]. NATURE SUSTAINABILITY,2020,3(4):281-289.
APA Folberth, Christian.,Khabarov, Nikolay.,Balkovic, Juraj.,Skalsky, Rastislav.,Visconti, Piero.,...&Obersteiner, Michael.(2020).The global cropland-sparing potential of high-yield farming.NATURE SUSTAINABILITY,3(4),281-289.
MLA Folberth, Christian,et al."The global cropland-sparing potential of high-yield farming".NATURE SUSTAINABILITY 3.4(2020):281-289.
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