Soil organic matter protects US maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under drought

Higher levels of soil organic matter improve soil water retention, meaning they could mitigate agricultural yield losses from drought. Yet evidence to support such claims is mixed and incomplete. Using data from 12 376 county-years in the United States of America, we show that counties with higher s...

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Main Authors: Daniel A Kane, Mark A Bradford, Emma Fuller, Emily E Oldfield, Stephen A Wood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2021-01-01
Series:Environmental Research Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abe492
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author Daniel A Kane
Mark A Bradford
Emma Fuller
Emily E Oldfield
Stephen A Wood
author_facet Daniel A Kane
Mark A Bradford
Emma Fuller
Emily E Oldfield
Stephen A Wood
author_sort Daniel A Kane
collection DOAJ
description Higher levels of soil organic matter improve soil water retention, meaning they could mitigate agricultural yield losses from drought. Yet evidence to support such claims is mixed and incomplete. Using data from 12 376 county-years in the United States of America, we show that counties with higher soil organic matter are associated with greater yields, lower yield losses, and lower rates of crop insurance payouts under drought. Under severe drought, an increase of 1% soil organic matter was associated with a yield increase of 2.2 ± 0.33 Mg ha ^−1 (32.7 bu ac ^−1 ) and a 36 ± 4.76% reduction in the mean proportion of liabilities paid. Similar, yet smaller, effects were found for less severe levels of drought and this effect was reduced as soil clay content increased. Confirmatory pathway analyses indicate that this positive association of soil organic matter and yields under drought is partially explained by positive effects of soil organic matter on available water capacity and cation exchange capacity, but that soil organic matter may be imparting yield protection via mechanisms not fully captured by those metrics. Overall, our results suggest soil organic matter predicts yield resilience at regional scales in the United States. We argue that data on soil organic matter should be used in agricultural policy and financial planning, with our analyses providing quantitative evidence of the co-benefits of soil organic matter believed fundamental to advancing soil health and carbon sequestration initiatives.
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spelling doaj.art-4cc8635a44344be9b66f65807ae44bd32023-08-09T14:56:25ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research Letters1748-93262021-01-0116404401810.1088/1748-9326/abe492Soil organic matter protects US maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under droughtDaniel A Kane0Mark A Bradford1Emma Fuller2Emily E Oldfield3Stephen A Wood4School of the Environment, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06511, United States of AmericaSchool of the Environment, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06511, United States of AmericaGranular, Inc. , San Francisco, CA 94103, United States of AmericaSchool of the Environment, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06511, United States of AmericaSchool of the Environment, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06511, United States of America; The Nature Conservancy , Arlington, VA 22203, United States of AmericaHigher levels of soil organic matter improve soil water retention, meaning they could mitigate agricultural yield losses from drought. Yet evidence to support such claims is mixed and incomplete. Using data from 12 376 county-years in the United States of America, we show that counties with higher soil organic matter are associated with greater yields, lower yield losses, and lower rates of crop insurance payouts under drought. Under severe drought, an increase of 1% soil organic matter was associated with a yield increase of 2.2 ± 0.33 Mg ha ^−1 (32.7 bu ac ^−1 ) and a 36 ± 4.76% reduction in the mean proportion of liabilities paid. Similar, yet smaller, effects were found for less severe levels of drought and this effect was reduced as soil clay content increased. Confirmatory pathway analyses indicate that this positive association of soil organic matter and yields under drought is partially explained by positive effects of soil organic matter on available water capacity and cation exchange capacity, but that soil organic matter may be imparting yield protection via mechanisms not fully captured by those metrics. Overall, our results suggest soil organic matter predicts yield resilience at regional scales in the United States. We argue that data on soil organic matter should be used in agricultural policy and financial planning, with our analyses providing quantitative evidence of the co-benefits of soil organic matter believed fundamental to advancing soil health and carbon sequestration initiatives.https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abe492agricultureclimate changeresiliencesoil organic matter
spellingShingle Daniel A Kane
Mark A Bradford
Emma Fuller
Emily E Oldfield
Stephen A Wood
Soil organic matter protects US maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under drought
Environmental Research Letters
agriculture
climate change
resilience
soil organic matter
title Soil organic matter protects US maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under drought
title_full Soil organic matter protects US maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under drought
title_fullStr Soil organic matter protects US maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under drought
title_full_unstemmed Soil organic matter protects US maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under drought
title_short Soil organic matter protects US maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under drought
title_sort soil organic matter protects us maize yields and lowers crop insurance payouts under drought
topic agriculture
climate change
resilience
soil organic matter
url https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abe492
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