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JonSCKs, El Nino
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zenfarm
Posted 11/15/2015 20:50 (#4898510 - in reply to #4898346)
Subject: RE: JonSCKs, El Nino


South central kansas
Don, wolfram schlenker uses the following degree days to construct his corn yield model.

http://www.g-feed.com/2015/08/us-weather-and-corn-yields-2015.html?...


More about how he constructs the degree days.
http://wolfram-schlenker.blogspot.com/2012/07/extreme-heat-in-us.ht...





US weather and corn yields 2015.
Here's the annual update on weather in the US, averaged over the areas where corn is grown. The preferred model by Michael Roberts and myself [paper] splits daily temperature into beneficial moderate heat (degree days 10-29C, or 50-84F) and harmful extreme heat (degree days above 29C, or 84F). These two variables (especially the one on extreme heat) are surprisingly powerful predictors of annual corn yields. So how does 2015 look like? Below are the numbers through the end of July.

First, here's the cumulative occurrence of extreme heat for March 1st, 2015 - July 31, 2015. The grey dashed lines are annual time series from 1950-2011, the black line is the average (1950-2010), and the colored lines show the last four years. 2012 (blue) was very hot and had very low yields as predicted by the model. On the other hand, 2014 (green) had among the lowest number of harmful extreme degree days. The current year, 2015 (magenta line), comes in slightly below normal so far.


Second, beneficial moderate heat is above average. Usually the two are positively correlated (when extreme heat is above normal, so is moderate heat). Lower-than average harmful extreme heat and above-average beneficial moderate heat suggests that we should see another above-average year in terms of crop yields (Qualification: August is still outstanding and farmers planted late this year in many areas due to the cold winter, suggesting that August might be more important than usual). This is supported by the fact that corn futures have been coming down

Edited by zenfarm 11/15/2015 21:46




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