Abstract
Sugar has formed an essential part of human diets for a long time and is an important raw material for the food, beverage and pharmaceutical industries. It is a common name for sucrose and can be extracted from two field crops—sugar beet and sugar cane. Sugar beet (Beta vulgaris ssp. vulgaris) is mainly grown in countries with temperate climates while sugar cane (Saccharum officinarum L.) is cultivated primarily in tropical and subtropical countries. It was demonstrated that sugar beet yield has kept increasing since 1926, but sugar concentration (on fresh weight basis) has not changed much. In the meantime, the improved potential sugar beet yields in the varieties included in the variety trials have been rapidly translated into commercially delivered yields by sugar beet farmers. This can be seen in the increase of farmer-delivered sugar beet yields in parallel with the increase of sugar beet yields in the variety trials. The warming temperature and increasing concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere due to climate change have benefitted the sugar beet crop in recent decades and will probably create opportunities to further boost sugar crop productivity in the future. However, social and environmental demands to adapt sugar beet production to both less input-intensive and less pesticide-dependent crop** systems to mitigate climate change and to maintain biodiversity friendly environments require sugar beet farmers to balance the trade-offs between maximising the sugar yield and increasing the use efficiencies of inputs such as fertilisers, fungicides, pesticides, herbicides and fuels. Sugar beet breeders and other stakeholders need to breed climate-smart cultivars resistant to diseases and find other effective non-chemical solutions to the reduced availability and/or removal of reliable pesticides in the face of more new pathogens emerging under climate change.
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Abbreviations
- ABF:
-
Associated British Foods plc
- AY:
-
Attainable yields
- BChV:
-
Beet chlorosis virus
- BMYV:
-
Beet mild yellowing virus
- BYV:
-
Beet yellows virus
- CV%:
-
Coefficient of variation
- FY:
-
Farmers’ yields
- GCM:
-
Global climate model
- GHG:
-
Greenhouse gas
- PY:
-
Potential yield
- PYwl:
-
Water-limited potential sugar beet yields
- RCPs:
-
Representative concentration pathways
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Acknowledgements
Thanks are due to Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, UK, for granting access to the meteorological data from the Broom’s Barn weather station, Suffolk, UK, to Dr. Mikhail A. Semenov at Rothamsted Research for help of future climate change scenario information and generating the climate change scenarios using his LARS-Weather Generator, to British Sugar of Associated British Foods plc for the virus yellows survey and sugar yield data each year, to Dr. Alan Dewar at Dewar Crop Protection Ltd. for sharing information on the rise and fall of neonicotinoids pesticide use on sugar beet, to Mr. Patrick Jarvis for sharing ideas develo** sugar beet management tools, and Mr. Tyler Grove, general agronomist and Ms. Kathy Wang, senior agriculture information analyst in American Crystal Sugar Company, Fargo, USA, for providing the sugar yield and sugar concentration data. Last, but not least, I thank Professor Keith Jaggard at Jaggard Consultancy, Sugar Beet Agronomy Research, Prof. Dr. Christa Hoffmann, Department of Physiology, Institute of Sugar Beet Research, Göttingen, Germany, for giving critical comments and improving this Chapter.
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Qi, A. (2022). Sugar Beet Production Under Changing Climate: Opportunities and Challenges. In: Misra, V., Srivastava, S., Mall, A.K. (eds) Sugar Beet Cultivation, Management and Processing. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-2730-0_20
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