Abstract

The goals of our study were to evaluate the historical aspects of maize (Zea mays L.) production in Hungary, and to provide a prognosis for the yield for 2050 based on the trends of temperature, precipitation, and climatic water balance changes. Different climate zones for the period of 1970–2019 were investigated by means of correlation analyses, normality tests, time series analysis, and multiple linear regression analysis. Two well-distinguishable linear trends in the yields were found, the first representing large-scale farming, and the second starting with the change of the socio-economic system in 1989. The annual amount of precipitation showed high variations both spatially and temporally, although no significant change was identified for the last five decades. In the period 1990–2019, not only were higher temperatures characteristic, but the frequency of extreme high temperature values (Tmax > 30 °C) also increased. We quantified the heat stress, expressing it in heat stress units (HSU, °C) derived from the heat-sum of the daily maximum air temperature values above 30 °C. By 2050, the average increase in HSUs may reach 35 °C. Increasing HSU causes yield depression; according to our estimations, a 1 °C increase in HSU results in a 23 kg ha−1 yield depression of maize. Taking the unfavorable effect of heat stress and technological development into consideration, the average domestic yield of maize will be 8.2 t ha−1. Our study revealed that without taking technological development into consideration, prediction models may overestimate the adverse effect of climate change on crop production.

Highlights

  • Changes in the yields of the different crops generally show an increase over time worldwide

  • According to the climatic classification of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), (IPCC), two climate zones are distinguished for Hungary [41]; (a) Cold Temperate Dry (CTED)

  • We found decreasing tendency annual and and seasonal seasonal climatic water balance (CWB)

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Summary

Introduction

Changes in the yields of the different crops generally show an increase over time worldwide. Changes in the trend lines can occur when major improvements result in significant changes in productivity, as for example, Nielsen [1] demonstrated for maize in the USA. Atmosphere 2020, 11, 1350 of a new technology, for example, new hybrids with increased genetic yield potential [1,3,4,5], or a sudden socio-economic change, such as the land use reform in the former communist countries in the. If the variation in the environmental factors increases, its contribution results in a larger deviation from the trend line. This may become increasingly dominant with spatial downscaling

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