| Literature DB >> 26177201 |
Ainhoa Magrach1, Jaboury Ghazoul1.
Abstract
Coffee is highly sensitive to temperature and rainfall, making its cultivation vulnerable to geographic shifts in response to a changing climate. This could lead to the establishment of coffee plantations in new areas and potential conflicts with other land covers including natural forest, with consequent implications for biodiversity and ecosystem services. We project areas suitable for future coffee cultivation based on several climate scenarios and expected responses of the coffee berry borer, a principle pest of coffee crops. We show that the global climatically-suitable area will suffer marked shifts from some current major centres of cultivation. Most areas will be suited to Robusta coffee, demand for which could be met without incurring forest encroachment. The cultivation of Arabica, which represents 70% of consumed coffee, can also be accommodated in the future, but only by incurring some natural forest loss. This has corresponding implications for carbon storage, and is likely to affect areas currently designated as priority areas for biodiversity. Where Arabica coffee does encroach on natural forests, we project average local losses of 35% of threatened vertebrate species. The interaction of climate and coffee berry borer greatly influences projected outcomes.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26177201 PMCID: PMC4503344 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0133071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Area suitability for coffee cultivation under the four concentration pathways of projected climate change in 2050 showing total suitability across all habitat types, suitability within areas not currently covered by forest, those not covered by other crops and in particular by cocoa and separating between the surface that will be suitable for the two main species of coffee.
Bold numbers indicate surfaces that are not enough to meet future demand, with total future demand for coffee being 10,507,974 and that for Arabica being 7,355,581. All areas are in hectares.
| Concentration pathway | Coffee species | Total area suitable | Suitable area outside forest | Suitable area outside forest and other crops |
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| Arabica | 21,288,000 | 10,652,800 | 9,106,176 |
| Robusta | 76,247,500 | 27,864,000 | 21,105,850 | |
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| Arabica | 18,744,200 | 9,876,630 | 8,496,244 |
| Robusta | 112,722,000 | 38,658,700 | 29,496,392 | |
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| Arabica | 21,628,100 | 11,119,300 | 9,632,061 |
| Robusta | 93,171,400 | 35,325,700 | 27,198,722 | |
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| Arabica | 16,011,900 | 7,808,080 |
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| Robusta | 107,420,900 | 34,399,300 | 25,622,863 | |
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Fig 1Projected suitability for a) Arabica and b) Robusta coffee cultivation in 2050 under one of the possible scenarios based on greenhouse gas emissions (RCP4.5) compared with the present area suitability and showing loss, gain and no change in suitability for each grid cell.
Fig 2Global distribution of optimal areas for a)-c) Arabica and d) Robusta coffee plantation in 2050 predicted by the model HADGEM2-AO and current forested surfaces, showing areas where coffee suitability might conflict with forest presence.
Fig 3a) Global distribution of optimal areas for coffee cultivation in 2050 predicted by the model HADGEM2-AO separating between those suitable for Arabica and Robusta cultivation after accounting for areas currently covered by forest and other crops and b) future distribution of their main pest the coffee berry borer under the RCP4.5 scenario.
Percent surface attacked by the coffee berry borer for each of the main coffee varieties and surface left after attack under an 8% or 24% attack rate by the berry borer and potential forest surface that might need to be changed to coffee cultivation in order to meet future demand.
For areas where forests might have to be changed to coffee we show values of average numbers of threatened species of vertebrates and conservation templates found within each grid cells, values show average and standard deviation for 100 simulations of coffee expansion.
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| Arabica | 76.30 | 8,377,682 | 0 | |||
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| Robusta | 91.20 | 19,417,382 | 0 | |||
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| Arabica | 76.61 | 7,816,544 | 0 | |||
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| Robusta | 93.47 | 27,136,681 | 0 | |||
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| Arabica | 79.80 | 8,861,496 | 0 | |||
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| Robusta | 94.20 | 25,022,824 | 0 | |||
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| Arabica | 78.80 | 6,193,142 |
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| Robusta | 93.20 | 23,573,034 | 0 | |||
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| Arabica | 76.30 |
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| Robusta | 91.20 | 16,040,446 | 0 | |||
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| Arabica | 76.61 |
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| Robusta | 93.47 | 22,417,258 | 0 | |||
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| Arabica | 79.80 |
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| Robusta | 94.20 | 20,671,028 | 0 | |||
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| Arabica | 78.80 |
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| Robusta | 93.20 | 19,473,376 | 0 | |||
Fig 4Subset of areas that will be suitable for Arabica cultivation in the future, that are currently under forest cover and within the vicinity of areas covered by coffee plantations at present showing a) the number of conservation priority templates that coincide with them, b) the number of threatened vertebrate species they host, and c) the amount of carbon stored per ha in the forests.