Agriculture, Vol. 16, Pages 143: Dynamics of Key Meteorological Variables and Their Impacts on Staple Crop Yields Across Large-Scale Farms in Heilongjiang, China


Agriculture, Vol. 16, Pages 143: Dynamics of Key Meteorological Variables and Their Impacts on Staple Crop Yields Across Large-Scale Farms in Heilongjiang, China

Agriculture doi: 10.3390/agriculture16020143

Authors:
Jingyang Li
Huanhuan Li
Xin Liu
Qiuju Wang
Qingying Meng
Jiahe Zou
Yifei Luo
Shuangchao Wang
Long Tan

Against the backdrop of global warming and a reshaped hydrothermal regime, the albic soil belt of the Sanjiang Plain, a major grain base, requires farm-scale evidence of how meteorological variability couples with staple-crop yields. Using meteorological and yield records from 2000 to 2023 at three large farms (859, 850, and 852), this study applied the Mann–Kendall test, wavelet and cross-wavelet coherence, Pearson correlation, gray relational analysis, and principal component analysis to track the evolution of air temperature, precipitation, evaporation, sunshine duration, relative humidity, and surface temperature, and to assess their multi-scale impacts on rice, corn, and soybean yields. The region warmed and became wetter overall, with dominant periodicities near 21a and 8a. Across the three farms, yields were significantly and positively associated with precipitation and air temperature (R > 0.60). Rice yield correlated strongly and negatively with evaporation at Farm 850 (R = −0.61) and at Farm 852 (R = −0.503). At Farm 859, gray relational analysis ranked precipitation highest for rice, corn, and soybean (γ = 0.853, 0.844, and 0.826), followed by air temperature. The first two principal components explained 67.66% of the variance; PC1 (41.80%) loaded positively for air temperature, and PC2 (25.86%) for precipitation and relative humidity. Cross-wavelet coherence indicated stable coupling between yields and hydrothermal variables, with the strongest coupling for rice with precipitation and air temperature, prominent coupling for corn with air temperature and sunshine duration, and stage-dependent responses of soybean to precipitation and evaporation. These results show that long-term trends together with phase-specific oscillations jointly shape yield variability. The findings support translating phase identification and sensitive windows into crop-specific rules for sowing or transplanting arrangements, irrigation timing, and early warning, providing a quantitative basis for climate-adaptive management on the study farms and, where soils, management, and microclimate are comparable, for the wider Sanjiang Plain.



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