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Optimizing the bioenergy water footprint by selecting SRC willow canopy phenotypes: regional scenario simulations
Authors
Agostini
Amichev
+68 more
Amichev
Andralojc
Benjamin Richard
Bonneau
Bonosi
Bonsch
Borek
Bouman
Busch
Cerasuolo
Cerasuolo
Cienciala
Cunniff
DOE
DOE
Finch
Gago
Gheewala
Goetz M Richter
Goudriaan
Gregory
Guénon
Hallett
Hammar
Hartwich
Horemans
Ian Shield
Karp
Karp
Karp
Karp
Krzyżaniak
Kuzovkina
Larsen
Larsen
Li
Liang
Linderson
Lindroth
Marianna Cerasuolo
Medrano
Nair
Noilhan
Persson
R Core Team
Richter
Richter
Richter
Robertson
Ronnberg-Wastljung
Searle
Sennerby-Forsse
Serapiglia
Silalertruksa
Sinclair
Smart
Stolarski
Stolarski
Tallis
Toillon
Tuck
Weih
Weih
Weih
Wikberg
Wu
Wösten
Zamora
Publication date
1 January 2019
Publisher
'Oxford University Press (OUP)'
Doi
Abstract
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. All rights reserved. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Background and Aims: Bioenergy is central for the future energy mix to mitigate climate change impacts; however, its intricate link with the water cycle calls for an evaluation of the carbon–water nexus in biomass production. The great challenge is to optimize trade-offs between carbon harvest and water use by choosing cultivars that combine low water use with high productivity. Methods: Regional scenarios were simulated over a range of willow genotype × environment interactions for the major UK soil × climate variations with the process-based model LUCASS. Soil available water capacity (SAWC) ranged from 51 to 251 mm and weather represented the north-west (wet, cool), north-east (dry, cool), south-west (wet, warm) and south-east (dry, warm) of the UK. Scenario simulations were evaluated for small/open narrow-leaf (NL) versus large/closed broad-leaf (BL) willow canopy phenotypes using baseline (1965–89) and warmer recent (1990–2014) weather data. Key Results: The low productivity under baseline climate in the north could be compensated by choosing BL cultivars (e.g. ‘Endurance’). Recent warmer climate increased average productivity by 0.5–2.5 t ha−1, especially in the north. The modern NL cultivar ‘Resolution’ had the smallest and most efficient water use. On marginal soils (SAWC <100 mm), yields remained below an economic threshold of 9 t ha−1 more frequently under baseline than recent climate. In the drought-prone south-east, ‘Endurance’ yielded less than ‘Resolution’, which consumed on average 17 mm year−1 less water. Assuming a planting area of 10 000 ha, in droughty years between 1.3 and 4.5 × 106 m3 of water could be saved, with a small yield penalty, for ‘Resolution’. Conclusions: With an increase in air temperature and occasional water scarcities expected with climate change, high-yielding NL cultivars should be the preferred choice for sustainable use of marginal lands and reduced competition with agricultural food crops.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
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