Climate change affecting oil palm agronomy, and oil palm cultivation increasing climate change, require amelioration

被引:69
作者
Paterson, R. Russell M. [1 ,2 ]
Lima, Nelson [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minho, CEB, Braga, Portugal
[2] Univ Putra Malaysia, Fac Agr, Dept Plant Protect, Serdang, Malaysia
关键词
Elaeis guineensis; Ganoderma; global warming; Indonesia; Malaysia; peat; GANODERMA DISEASE; CARBON EMISSIONS; PLANTATION; DEFORESTATION; AGRICULTURE; TEMPERATURE; KALIMANTAN; MANAGEMENT; EXPANSION; INDONESIA;
D O I
10.1002/ece3.3610
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Palm oil is used in various valued commodities and is a large global industry worth over US$ 50 billion annually. Oil palms (OP) are grown commercially in Indonesia and Malaysia and other countries within Latin America and Africa. The large-scale land-use change has high ecological, economic, and social impacts. Tropical countries in particular are affected negatively by climate change (CC) which also has a detrimental impact on OP agronomy, whereas the cultivation of OP increases CC. Amelioration of both is required. The reduced ability to grow OP will reduce CC, which may allow more cultivation tending to increase CC, in a decreasing cycle. OP could be increasingly grown in more suitable regions occurring under CC. Enhancing the soil fauna may compensate for the effect of CC on OP agriculture to some extent. The effect of OP cultivation on CC may be reduced by employing reduced emissions from deforestation and forest degradation plans, for example, by avoiding illegal fire land clearing. Other ameliorating methods are reported herein. More research is required involving good management practices that can offset the increases in CC by OP plantations. Overall, OP-growing countries should support the Paris convention on reducing CC as the most feasible scheme for reducing CC.
引用
收藏
页码:452 / 461
页数:10
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]   Synergies for Improving Oil Palm Production and Forest Conservation in Floodplain Landscapes [J].
Abram, Nicola K. ;
Xofis, Panteleimon ;
Tzanopoulos, Joseph ;
MacMillan, Douglas C. ;
Ancrenaz, Marc ;
Chung, Robin ;
Peter, Lucy ;
Ong, Robert ;
Lackman, Isabelle ;
Goossens, Benoit ;
Ambu, Laurentius ;
Knight, Andrew T. .
PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (06)
[2]   Ergosterol analyses of oil palm seedlings and plants infected with Ganoderma [J].
As'wad, A. W. Mohd ;
Sariah, M. ;
Paterson, R. R. M. ;
Abidin, M. A. Zainal ;
Lima, N. .
CROP PROTECTION, 2011, 30 (11) :1438-1442
[3]   Arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis alters stomatal conductance of host plants more under drought than under amply watered conditions: a meta-analysis [J].
Auge, Robert M. ;
Toler, Heather D. ;
Saxton, Arnold M. .
MYCORRHIZA, 2015, 25 (01) :13-24
[4]   Estimated carbon dioxide emissions from tropical deforestation improved by carbon-density maps [J].
Baccini, A. ;
Goetz, S. J. ;
Walker, W. S. ;
Laporte, N. T. ;
Sun, M. ;
Sulla-Menashe, D. ;
Hackler, J. ;
Beck, P. S. A. ;
Dubayah, R. ;
Friedl, M. A. ;
Samanta, S. ;
Houghton, R. A. .
NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2012, 2 (03) :182-185
[5]   Oil palm natural diversity and the potential for yield improvement [J].
Barcelos, Edson ;
Rios, Sara de Almeida ;
Cunha, Raimundo N. V. ;
Lopes, Ricardo ;
Motoike, Sergio Y. ;
Babiychuk, Elena ;
Skirycz, Aleksandra ;
Kushnir, Sergei .
FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2015, 6 :1-16
[6]   Refined carbon accounting for oil palm agriculture: disentangling potential contributions of indirect emissions and smallholder farmers [J].
Carlson, Kimberly M. ;
Curran, Lisa M. .
CARBON MANAGEMENT, 2013, 4 (04) :347-349
[7]  
Carlson KM, 2013, NAT CLIM CHANGE, V3, P283, DOI [10.1038/nclimate1702, 10.1038/NCLIMATE1702]
[8]   How do the heterotrophic and the total soil respiration of an oil palm plantation on peat respond to nitrogen fertilizer application? [J].
Comeau, Louis-Pierre ;
Hergoualc'h, Kristell ;
Hartill, Jodie ;
Smith, Jo ;
Verchot, Louis V. ;
Peak, Derek ;
Salim, Agus Mohammad .
GEODERMA, 2016, 268 :41-51
[9]  
Corley R.H. V., 2016, The Oil Palm
[10]  
Dermawan A., 2015, ANTI CORRUPTION RESO, V5, P1