Close Menu
  • Home
  • Local News
  • State News
  • Crime and Safety
  • Politics
  • Community
  • About us
What's Hot

23-year-old man dead, 16-year-old teen critically injured after shooting at Hicks Park as Tulsa Police investigate deadly overnight incident

July 8, 2026

43-year-old woman arrested after Tulsa Police find PCP in vehicle following hit-and-run crash at apartment complex

July 8, 2026

Tulsa Fire Department joins neighborhood Fourth of July celebration

July 8, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • 23-year-old man dead, 16-year-old teen critically injured after shooting at Hicks Park as Tulsa Police investigate deadly overnight incident
  • 43-year-old woman arrested after Tulsa Police find PCP in vehicle following hit-and-run crash at apartment complex
  • Tulsa Fire Department joins neighborhood Fourth of July celebration
  • Tulsa Police Department joins community celebrations during Independence Day parades
  • Tulsa Police seek help identifying person of interest in stolen credit card case
  • Tulsa Fire Department announces promotion of lieutenant to captain
  • Tulsa Police Department begins second Spanish Citizens Police Academy
  • Tulsa Police officers connect with local families during Coloring with a Cop event
Friday, July 17
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Tulsa News NowTulsa News Now
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Local News
  • State News
  • Crime and Safety
  • Politics
  • Community
  • About us
Tulsa News NowTulsa News Now
Home»Local News

From the Farm: Climate Change And Crops

By Joe MasonSeptember 26, 2020Updated:November 14, 2020 Local News No Comments2 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

On the day that the U.S. officially departed from the Paris Climate Agreement, the University of Illinois released a lengthy study about the impact of climate on crops.

Globally renowned U. of I. Crop Scientist Stephen Long says a changing climate has both positive and negative impacts on important crop.

“On this site, we have the longest-running experiments in the world and the largest experiments in the world looking at the impact of global change on our major food crops,” says Long. “We have been studying soybean on this site now for almost 20 years looking at how rising carbon dioxide, rising temperature will impact the crop.

“What we have found is that rising carbon dioxide does actually boost the yield of soybean, although it lowers the quality of that seed, particularly mineral nutrients are lower in the seed. However, the other thing we have found is the 2 degree Celsius temperature rise we expect to happen with rising carbon dioxide wipes out all of that gain and actually lowers the yield.”

It would take a long time, but would biotechnology be able to overcome that yield loss?

“Biotechnology with breeding it would be possible to overcome some of these problems, but if we are going to do that, we need to start now,” Long says. “We can’t wait for these changes to occur, have a loss in soybean yields, without starting to address this. I should also say we have looked at corn on this site. Corn shows no response to rising carbon dioxide, except from drought conditions, where it can be slightly better off.”

Long says the only way around the problem is for a reduction in global carbon dioxide emissions.

Joe Mason

Keep Reading

Tulsa Fire Department joins neighborhood Fourth of July celebration

Tulsa Fire Department announces promotion of lieutenant to captain

Tulsa Police officers connect with local families during Coloring with a Cop event

Tulsa firefighters train with Oklahoma and Texas task force members during specialized water rescue exercise

Tulsa firefighter retires after more than 25 years of dedicated service to the community

Tulsa Police seek suspect captured on surveillance cameras during apartment burglary investigation

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks
Latest Posts

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

Advertisement
Demo

Tulsa News Now is a local news journal. Tulsa, OK needed more reporting and more journalistic competition, so Joe Mason started this website back in 2014. Our mission is to connect the people in Tulsa with news, data and education that will make their everyday tasks much easier.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

  • Home
  • Local News
  • State News
  • Crime and Safety
  • Politics
  • Community
  • About us
© 2026 Tulsa News Now. Designed by TulsaNewsNow.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.