Document

Shifts in the thermal niche of almond under climate change

Resource Location: 
Remotely hosted behind paywall
Author: 
Parker, Lauren E., and John T. Abatzoglou
Date: 
2018
Geographic Keywords:
Abstract: 

Delineating geographic shifts in crop cultivation under future climate conditions provides information for land use and water management planning, and insights to meeting future demand. A suitability modeling approach was used to map the thermal niche of almond cultivation and phenological development across the Western United States (US) through the mid-21st century. The Central Valley of California remains thermally suitable for almond cultivation through the mid-21st century, and opportunities for expansion appear in the Willamette Valley of western Oregon, which is currently limited by insufficient heat accumulation. Modeled almond phenology shows a compression in reproductive development under future climate. By the mid-21st century, almond phenology in the Central Valley showed ~ 2-week delay in chill accumulation and ~ 1- and ~ 2.5-week advance in the timing of bloom and harvest, respectively. Although other climatic and non-climatic restrictions to almond cultivation may exist, these results highlight opportunities for shifts in the geography of high-value cropping systems, which may influence growers’ long-term land use decisions, and shape regional water and agricultural industry discussions regarding climate change adaptation options.

Citation: 

Parker, Lauren E., and John T. Abatzoglou. 2018. “Shifts in the Thermal Niche of Almond under Climate Change.” Climatic Change 147 (1–2): 211–24. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-017-2118-6.