RRC ID 69718
Author Igawa TK, Toledo PM, Anjos LJS.
Title Climate change could reduce and spatially reconfigure cocoa cultivation in the Brazilian Amazon by 2050.
Journal PLoS One
Abstract Cocoa is a plant with origins in northwestern South America with high relevance in the global economy. Evidence indicates that cocoa is sensitive to a dry climate, under which crop production is reduced. Projections for future climate change scenarios suggest a warmer and drier climate in the Amazon basin. In this paper, we quantify the potential effects in cocoa production due to its edaphoclimatic suitability changes to the Brazilian Amazon biome and account for regional differences in planning occupation territories. We modeled the suitability of cocoa's geographical distribution using an ensemble of 10 correlative models that were run in the "biomod2" library and projected to two future climate scenarios (RCPs 4.5 and 8.5) by 2050. Combining information on climate and soil suitability and installed infrastructure in the macro-regions of the Brazilian Amazon. We defined a zoning system to indicate how cocoa production may respond to climate change according to the current and future suitability model. Our results suggest that a reduction in precipitation and an increase in temperature may promote a reduction in the suitability of cocoa production in the Brazilian Amazon biome. In addition of the areas suitable for cocoa plantation, we found a 37.05% and 73.15% decrease in the areas suitable for intensification and expansion zones under RCP 4.5 and 8.5, respectively, compared with the current scenario. We conclude that there may be a need to expand land to cocoa production in the future, or else it will be necessary to plant a cocoa variety resistant to new climatic conditions. Besides, we recommend procedures to combat illegal deforestation to prevent the most critical climate change scenarios from occurring.
Volume 17(1)
Pages e0262729
Published 2022-1-18
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0262729
PII PONE-D-20-32684
PMID 35041710
PMC PMC8765622
MeSH Brazil Cacao / growth & development* Climate Change* Crops, Agricultural / growth & development* Ecosystem* Seasons* Temperature*
IF 2.74
Resource
GBIF Ibaraki Nature Museum, Vascular Plants collection