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Proposing an interdisciplinary and cross-scale framework for global change and food security researches
► An integrated framework is presented for global change and food security studies. ► The related studies can be carried out at three levels: field, regional, and global. ► Studies at each level are categorized to different science disciplines. ► Outcomes at each research level should be integrated...
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Published in: | Agriculture, ecosystems & environment ecosystems & environment, 2012-08, Vol.156, p.57-71 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | ► An integrated framework is presented for global change and food security studies. ► The related studies can be carried out at three levels: field, regional, and global. ► Studies at each level are categorized to different science disciplines. ► Outcomes at each research level should be integrated for comprehensive assessment.
Food security is greatly affected by the consequences of global change, especially its impact on agriculture. Currently, global change and food system interaction is a hot issue across the scientific community. Scientists have tried to explain this interaction from different perspectives, and the issues related to this interaction can be classified as (1) crop yield and productivity in response to global change; (2) crop distribution and allocation in relation with global change; (3) general impacts on food security. However, most of the existing studies lack consistency and continuity. As food systems exist at the intersection of the coupled human and natural system, the interdisciplinary context of global change and food security requires an integrated and collaborative framework for better describing their importance and complexity. To do so, we decompose global change/food security studies into different levels in accordance with the previous mentioned issues, field, regional, and global, and categorize them into the life sciences, earth and environmental sciences, and social and sustainability sciences, respectively (yet not necessarily one to one correspondence). At the field level, long-term observations and controlled experiments in situ are important for exploring the mechanism of how global change will affect crop growth, and for considering possible adaptation methods that may maximize crop productivity. At the regional level, priority should be given to monitoring and simulating crop production (animal production and fishery are not included here) within large areas (a region or a continent). At the global level, food security studies should be based on scenario assessments to prioritize human adaptations under the changed environment, using integrated socioeconomic–biogeophysical measures. |
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ISSN: | 0167-8809 1873-2305 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.agee.2012.04.026 |