Probabilistic Assessment of Crop Yield Loss Under Drought and Global Warming in the Canadian Prairies
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This study assessed the vulnerability of canola, spring wheat, and barley yields in the Canadian Prairies to drought stress under future climate scenarios, integrating DSSAT crop models with NEX-GDDP CMIP6 projections and probabilistic copula analysis. The DSSAT simulations reproduced historical yields with high accuracy (d > 0.7, nRMSE < 15–20%), confirming its applicability for Prairie agroecosystems. Results indicate distinct crop-specific sensitivities to warming; barley showed relative resilience with modest yield gains (~10%) at 1.5–2 °C of global warming (GW), wheat exhibited heterogeneous re-sponses with early minor gains (~1%) followed by declines (~8%) beyond 3 °C of GW, and canola displayed consistent and substantial losses (20–37%) even under moderate warming. Spatial analysis highlighted northern and central Prairie zones that maintain relative stability, while southern Brown and Black-Brown soils face the steepest yield declines. Copula-based analysis further revealed that canola is most vulnerable to dry conditions, with yield exceedance probabilities falling from 62% (wet years) to ~25–28% (dry years) under GW. These findings underscore that Prairie crop production faces increasingly heterogeneous risks, with canola emerging as the most climate-sensitive crop. Targeted adaptation strategies such as stress-tolerant cultivars, shifting cropping zones, and improved water management will be essential to mitigate projected drought impacts and sustain Prairie agricultural productivity.