Impacts of potential climate change on selected agroclimatic indices in Atlantic Canada
Bootsma, A., Gameda, S., McKenney, D.W. Impacts of potential climate change on selected agroclimatic indices in Atlantic Canada Canadian Journal of Soil Science Volume 85, Issue 2, May 2005, Pages 329-343.
Bootsma, A., Gameda, S., McKenney, D.W. Impacts of potential
climate change on selected agroclimatic indices in Atlantic Canada
Canadian Journal of Soil Science Volume 85, Issue 2, May 2005,
Pages 329-343.
Abstract Agroclimatic indices (heat units and water deficits) were
determined for the Atlantic region of Canada for a baseline climate
(1961 to 1990 period) and for two future time periods (2010 to 2039
and 2040 to 2069). Climate scenarios for the future periods were
primarily based on outputs from the Canadian General Circulation
Model (GCM) that included the effects of aerosols (CGCMI-A), but
variability introduced by multiple GCM experiments was also
examined. Climatic data for all three periods were interpolated to
a grid of about 10 to 15 km. Agroclimatic indices were computed and
mapped based on the gridded data. Based on CGCMI-A scenarios
interpolated to the fine grid, average crop heat units (CHU) would
increase by 300 to 500 CHU for the 2010 to 2039 period and by 500
to 700 CHU for the 2040 to 2069 period in the main agricultural
areas of the Atlantic region. However, increases in CHU for the
2040 to 2069 period typically varied from 450 to 1650 units in
these regions when variability among GCM experiments was
considered, resulting in a projected range of 2650 to 4000
available CHU. Effective growing degree-days above 5°C (EGDD)
typically increased by about 400 units for the 2040 to 2069 period
in the main agricultural areas, resulting in available EGDD from
1800 to over 2000 units. Uncertainty introduced by multiple GCMs
increased the range from 1700 to 2700 EGDD. A decrease in heat
units (cooling) is anticipated along part of the coast of Labrador.
Anticipated changes in water deficits (DEFICIT), defined as the
amount by which potential evapotranspiration exceeded precipitation
over the growing season, typically ranged from +50 to -50 mm for
both periods, but this range widened from +50 to -100 mm when
variability among GCM experiments was considered. The greatest
increases in deficits were expected in the central region of New
Brunswick for the 2040 to 2069 period. Our interpolation procedures
estimated mean winter and summer temperature changes that were
1.4°C on average lower than a statistical downscaling procedure
(SDSM) for four locations. Increases in precipitation during summer
and autumn averaged 20% less than SDSM. During periods when SDSM
estimated relatively small changes in temperature or precipitation,
our interpolation procedure tended to produce changes that were
larger than SDSM. Additional investigations would be beneficial
that explore the impact of a range of scenarios from other GCM
models, other downscaling methods and the potential effects of
change in climate variability on these agroclimatic indices.
Potential impacts of these changes on crop yields and production in
the region also need to be explored.



