Abstract

Pineapple is one of the most important tropical fruit species, widely cultivated and economically important in Benin. This study aimed to identify potentially favorable areas for the cultivation of pineapple under current and future environmental conditions in Benin. The two cultivars of pineapple grown in Benin were separately considered: Sugarloaf and Smooth Cayenne. Five (05) modeling algorithms such as Maxent, Random Forest (RF), Support-Vector Machines (SVM), Boosted Regression Trees (BRT) and Generalized Linear Model (GLM) were compared using the criteria: area under the curve (AUC), sensitivity, specificity, Cohen’s Kappa, deviance and True Skill Statistic (TSS). The future climate models available for Africa at horizon 2055 were used under the “Representative Concentration Pathways” scenario 4.5 and 8.5. Results suggested that pineapple suitable areas were governed by a combination of effects of climate (temperature and precipitation) and soils characteristics. Indeed, soil pH, temperature seasonality and precipitation of driest quarter were the main variables driving pineapple production in Benin. Results also indicated that RF was the most suitable technique to model the distribution of pineapples regardless of the variety. The current potential range of favorable areas for the two varieties was mainly found in the central and southern parts of the country. In the future, following the RCP4.5 scenario, there will be an increase in the area favorable for the cultivation of Smooth Cayenne variety by 5.28% compared to the current situation whereas, the area favorable for the cultivation of the Sugarloaf variety will be increased by 7.7%. However, suitable areas for cultivation of Smooth Cayenne and Sugarloaf following the RCP8.5 scenario will be increased, respectively by 21.82% and 31.64%. The low and medium suitability areas for the cultivation of smooth cayenne will decrease by 15.57% and 2.93%, respectively at the horizon 2055 with future conditions under RCP4.5, and 15.48% and 4.97%, respectively at the horizon 2055 with future conditions under RCP8.5. For sugarloaf, the low and medium suitable cultivation areas will decrease by 1.59% and 14.24, respectively at the horizon 2055 with future conditions under RCP4.5. According to RCP8.5, the low suitable areas will decrease by 5.08%. This study constitutes an initial step towards a sustainable scheme for planning exploration of the possibility of extending pineapple cultivation in Benin. Key words: Climate change, modeling, algorithms, pineapple, potential area distribution

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