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Human drivers, biophysical changes, and climatic variation affecting contemporary cropping proportions in the northern prairie of the U.S

December 7, 2017

Grassland to cropland conversion in the northern prairie of the United States has been a topic of recent land use change studies. Within this region more corn and soybeans are grown now (2017) than in the past, but most studies to date have not examined multi-decadal trends and the synergistic web of socio-ecological driving forces involved, opting instead for short-term analyses and easily targeted agents of change. This paper examines the coalescing of biophysical and socioeconomic driving forces that have brought change to the agricultural landscape of this region between 1980 and 2013. While land conversion has occurred, most of the region’s cropland in 2013 had been previously cropped by the early 1980s. Furthermore, the agricultural conditions in which crops were grown during those three decades have changed considerably because of non-biophysical alterations to production practices and changing agricultural markets. Findings revealed that human drivers played more of a role in crop change than biophysical changes, that blending quantitative and qualitative methods to tell a more complete story of crop change in this region was difficult because of the synergistic characteristics of the drivers involved, and that more research is needed to understand how farmers make crop choice decisions.

Publication Year 2018
Title Human drivers, biophysical changes, and climatic variation affecting contemporary cropping proportions in the northern prairie of the U.S
DOI 10.1080/1747423X.2017.1413433
Authors Roger Auch, George Xian, Christopher R. Laingen, Kristi Sayler, R Reker
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Land Use Science
Index ID 70268475
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center
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