Rainfall anomalies are a significant driver of cropland expansion
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Edited by Anthony J. Bebbington, Clark University, Worcester, MA, and approved March 18, 2020 (received for review June 22, 2019)

Significance
Rainfall anomalies are known to have deleterious impacts on agricultural yields, but the resulting consequences on cropland expansion remain uncertain. We study the differential scale of these impacts around the world. We find that repeated dry anomalies increase cropland expansion specifically in developing countries, which are characteristically dominated by small-holder farming, implying that cropland is expanded to compensate for lower yields. Two tests corroborate the results. First, comparable reductions in forest cover due to repeated dry anomalies are found in the same regions where cropland expands. Second, in places where infrastructure buffers yields from rainfall anomalies, cropland expansion halts. Understanding the synchronous challenges facing agriculture and the environment will be critical to inform appropriate policy interventions.
Abstract
Rainfall anomalies have long occupied center stage in policy discussions, and understanding their impacts on agricultural production has become more important as climate change intensifies. However, the global scale of rainfall-induced productivity shocks on changes in cropland is yet to be quantified. Here we identify how rainfall anomalies impact observed patterns of cropped areas at a global scale by leveraging locally determined unexpected variations in rainfall. Employing disaggregated panel data at the grid level, we find that repeated dry anomalies lead to an increase in cropland expansion in developing countries. No discernible effects are detected from repeated wet events. That these effects are confined to developing countries, which are often dominated by small-holder farmers, implies that they may be in response to reduced yields. The estimates suggest that overall, in developing countries, dry anomalies account for ∼9% of the rate of cropland expansion over the past two decades. We perform several tests to check for consistency and robustness of this relationship. First, using forest cover as an alternative measure, we find comparable reductions in forest cover in the same regions where cropland expands due to repeated dry anomalies. Second, we test the relationship in regions where yields are buffered from rainfall anomalies by irrigation infrastructure and find that the impact on cropland expansion is mitigated, providing further support for our results. Since cropland expansion is a significant driver of deforestation, these results have important implications for forest loss and environmental services.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: ezaveri{at}worldbank.org.
Author contributions: E.Z., J.R., and R.D. designed research; E.Z. and J.R. performed research; E.Z. and J.R. analyzed data; and E.Z., J.R., and R.D. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no competing interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at https://www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1910719117/-/DCSupplemental.
Published under the PNAS license.
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