{"title":"Feasibility analysis of expanding winter rapeseed northwards in China","authors":"Junqiang Fan, Gang Yang, Junyan Wu, Yuanyuan Pu, Lijun Liu, Li Ma, Tingting Fan, Wangtian Wang, Yahong Zhang, Jianming Lei, Qiang Li, Xianfei Hou, Caixia Zhao, Song Tang, Changbing Chen, Zhe Zhang, Jihong Zhou, Chunqing Miao, Wanpeng Wang, Jing Bai, Wancang Sun","doi":"10.1016/j.agrformet.2024.110297","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"With high elevations, complex topographies, cold winter, diverse ecosystems, and a long history of oilseed <em>Brassica rapa</em> cultivation, Northwest China is rich in winter-hardy <em>B. rapa</em> germplasms. Using these germplasms, a number of ultra-winter-hardy rapeseed cultivars were developed in past three decades, leading to a large-scale northward expansion of winter rapeseed production in China. Based on 19 years of field trial data, this study was to assess the feasibility of growing winter rapeseed in the areas of northern China where conventionally no winter rapeseed had grown prior to availability of the ultra-winter-hardy <em>B. rapa</em> cultivars. The impacts of the major climate factors on overwintering rates and yields were analyzed. Using the boundary line analysis, the suitable growing regions for different cultivars were defined. The ultra winter-hardy cultivars displayed exceptional adaptability in frigid environments, with overwintering rates exceeding 70 % under conditions of extreme winter temperatures as low as -42.35 °C. Suitability analyses indicate that up to 534,000 km² of farmland in northern China are suitable for expanding winter rapeseed cultivation, potentially yielding between 5.61 and 12.34 million tons of winter rapeseed. This expansion could result in an approximately 30 % increase in the total domestic oilseed processing volume, significantly enhancing China's self-sufficiency in vegetable oil production. Our data suggest that these new ultra-winter-hardy rapeseed cultivars have made winter rapeseed production feasible, profitable, environmentally beneficial, and economically important in northern China.","PeriodicalId":50839,"journal":{"name":"Agricultural and Forest Meteorology","volume":"76 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":5.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Agricultural and Forest Meteorology","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agrformet.2024.110297","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"AGRONOMY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
With high elevations, complex topographies, cold winter, diverse ecosystems, and a long history of oilseed Brassica rapa cultivation, Northwest China is rich in winter-hardy B. rapa germplasms. Using these germplasms, a number of ultra-winter-hardy rapeseed cultivars were developed in past three decades, leading to a large-scale northward expansion of winter rapeseed production in China. Based on 19 years of field trial data, this study was to assess the feasibility of growing winter rapeseed in the areas of northern China where conventionally no winter rapeseed had grown prior to availability of the ultra-winter-hardy B. rapa cultivars. The impacts of the major climate factors on overwintering rates and yields were analyzed. Using the boundary line analysis, the suitable growing regions for different cultivars were defined. The ultra winter-hardy cultivars displayed exceptional adaptability in frigid environments, with overwintering rates exceeding 70 % under conditions of extreme winter temperatures as low as -42.35 °C. Suitability analyses indicate that up to 534,000 km² of farmland in northern China are suitable for expanding winter rapeseed cultivation, potentially yielding between 5.61 and 12.34 million tons of winter rapeseed. This expansion could result in an approximately 30 % increase in the total domestic oilseed processing volume, significantly enhancing China's self-sufficiency in vegetable oil production. Our data suggest that these new ultra-winter-hardy rapeseed cultivars have made winter rapeseed production feasible, profitable, environmentally beneficial, and economically important in northern China.
期刊介绍:
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology is an international journal for the publication of original articles and reviews on the inter-relationship between meteorology, agriculture, forestry, and natural ecosystems. Emphasis is on basic and applied scientific research relevant to practical problems in the field of plant and soil sciences, ecology and biogeochemistry as affected by weather as well as climate variability and change. Theoretical models should be tested against experimental data. Articles must appeal to an international audience. Special issues devoted to single topics are also published.
Typical topics include canopy micrometeorology (e.g. canopy radiation transfer, turbulence near the ground, evapotranspiration, energy balance, fluxes of trace gases), micrometeorological instrumentation (e.g., sensors for trace gases, flux measurement instruments, radiation measurement techniques), aerobiology (e.g. the dispersion of pollen, spores, insects and pesticides), biometeorology (e.g. the effect of weather and climate on plant distribution, crop yield, water-use efficiency, and plant phenology), forest-fire/weather interactions, and feedbacks from vegetation to weather and the climate system.