Soil Quality Critical to Help Some U.S. Crops Weather Heat Stress from Climate Change
Published:17 Jul.2022    Source:Emory University

The capacity of soil to hold water will be critical to determine how well farms in some regions of the United States manage the problem of prolonged heat stress due to climate change, a new study suggests. The journal Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems published the finding, based on analyses of 30 years of data on four major U.S. crops -- corn, soybeans, cotton and wheat.

 
"At the same time that farmers are facing more extreme weather events caused by climate change they are dealing with the growing problem of soil degradation," says Debjani Sihi, first author of the study and assistant professor in Emory University's Department of Environmental Sciences.