Is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in China?

Increasing demand for food, driven by unprecedented population growth and increasing consumption, will keep challenging food security in China. Although cereal yields have substantially improved during the last three decades, whether it will keep thriving to meet the increasing demand is not known y...

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Main Authors: Xing Wei, Zhao Zhang, Peijun Shi, Pin Wang, Yi Chen, Xiao Song, Fulu Tao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116430
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author Xing Wei
Zhao Zhang
Peijun Shi
Pin Wang
Yi Chen
Xiao Song
Fulu Tao
author_facet Xing Wei
Zhao Zhang
Peijun Shi
Pin Wang
Yi Chen
Xiao Song
Fulu Tao
author_sort Xing Wei
collection DOAJ
description Increasing demand for food, driven by unprecedented population growth and increasing consumption, will keep challenging food security in China. Although cereal yields have substantially improved during the last three decades, whether it will keep thriving to meet the increasing demand is not known yet. Thus, an integrated analysis on the trends of crop yield and cultivated area is essential to better understand current state of food security in China, especially on county scale. So far, yield stagnation has extensively dominated the main cereal-growing areas across China. Rice yield is facing the most severe stagnation that 53.9% counties tracked in the study have stagnated significantly, followed by maize (42.4%) and wheat (41.9%). As another important element for production sustainability, but often neglected is the planted area patterns. It has been further demonstrated that the loss in productive arable land for rice and wheat have dramatically increased the pressure on achieving food security. Not only a great deal of the planted areas have stagnated since 1980, but also collapsed. 48.4% and 54.4% of rice- and wheat-growing counties have lost their cropland areas to varying degrees. Besides, 27.6% and 35.8% of them have retrograded below the level of the 1980s. The combined influence (both loss in yield and area) has determined the crop sustainable production in China to be pessimistic for rice and wheat, and consequently no surprise to find that more than half of counties rank a lower level of production sustainability. Therefore, given the potential yield increase in wheat and maize, as well as substantial area loss of rice and wheat, the possible targeted adaptation measures for both yield and cropping area is required at county scale. Moreover, policies on food trade, alongside advocation of low calorie diets, reducing food loss and waste can help to enhance food security.
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spelling doaj.art-e1a12ee5201d42f38578e305abdff7ae2022-12-21T18:25:22ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01102e011643010.1371/journal.pone.0116430Is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in China?Xing WeiZhao ZhangPeijun ShiPin WangYi ChenXiao SongFulu TaoIncreasing demand for food, driven by unprecedented population growth and increasing consumption, will keep challenging food security in China. Although cereal yields have substantially improved during the last three decades, whether it will keep thriving to meet the increasing demand is not known yet. Thus, an integrated analysis on the trends of crop yield and cultivated area is essential to better understand current state of food security in China, especially on county scale. So far, yield stagnation has extensively dominated the main cereal-growing areas across China. Rice yield is facing the most severe stagnation that 53.9% counties tracked in the study have stagnated significantly, followed by maize (42.4%) and wheat (41.9%). As another important element for production sustainability, but often neglected is the planted area patterns. It has been further demonstrated that the loss in productive arable land for rice and wheat have dramatically increased the pressure on achieving food security. Not only a great deal of the planted areas have stagnated since 1980, but also collapsed. 48.4% and 54.4% of rice- and wheat-growing counties have lost their cropland areas to varying degrees. Besides, 27.6% and 35.8% of them have retrograded below the level of the 1980s. The combined influence (both loss in yield and area) has determined the crop sustainable production in China to be pessimistic for rice and wheat, and consequently no surprise to find that more than half of counties rank a lower level of production sustainability. Therefore, given the potential yield increase in wheat and maize, as well as substantial area loss of rice and wheat, the possible targeted adaptation measures for both yield and cropping area is required at county scale. Moreover, policies on food trade, alongside advocation of low calorie diets, reducing food loss and waste can help to enhance food security.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116430
spellingShingle Xing Wei
Zhao Zhang
Peijun Shi
Pin Wang
Yi Chen
Xiao Song
Fulu Tao
Is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in China?
PLoS ONE
title Is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in China?
title_full Is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in China?
title_fullStr Is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in China?
title_full_unstemmed Is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in China?
title_short Is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in China?
title_sort is yield increase sufficient to achieve food security in china
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116430
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