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Dive into the research topics where Thomas A. M. Pugh is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas A. M. Pugh.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Assessing agricultural risks of climate change in the 21st century in a global gridded crop model intercomparison

Cynthia Rosenzweig; Joshua Elliott; Delphine Deryng; Alex C. Ruane; Christoph Müller; Almut Arneth; Kenneth J. Boote; Christian Folberth; Michael Glotter; Nikolay Khabarov; Kathleen Neumann; Franziska Piontek; Thomas A. M. Pugh; Erwin Schmid; Elke Stehfest; Hong Yang; James W. Jones

Significance Agriculture is arguably the sector most affected by climate change, but assessments differ and are thus difficult to compare. We provide a globally consistent, protocol-based, multimodel climate change assessment for major crops with explicit characterization of uncertainty. Results with multimodel agreement indicate strong negative effects from climate change, especially at higher levels of warming and at low latitudes where developing countries are concentrated. Simulations that consider explicit nitrogen stress result in much more severe impacts from climate change, with implications for adaptation planning. Here we present the results from an intercomparison of multiple global gridded crop models (GGCMs) within the framework of the Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement Project and the Inter-Sectoral Impacts Model Intercomparison Project. Results indicate strong negative effects of climate change, especially at higher levels of warming and at low latitudes; models that include explicit nitrogen stress project more severe impacts. Across seven GGCMs, five global climate models, and four representative concentration pathways, model agreement on direction of yield changes is found in many major agricultural regions at both low and high latitudes; however, reducing uncertainty in sign of response in mid-latitude regions remains a challenge. Uncertainties related to the representation of carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and high temperature effects demonstrated here show that further research is urgently needed to better understand effects of climate change on agricultural production and to devise targeted adaptation strategies.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2012

Effectiveness of Green Infrastructure for Improvement of Air Quality in Urban Street Canyons

Thomas A. M. Pugh; A. Robert MacKenzie; J. Duncan Whyatt; C. Nicholas Hewitt

Street-level concentrations of nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)) and particulate matter (PM) exceed public health standards in many cities, causing increased mortality and morbidity. Concentrations can be reduced by controlling emissions, increasing dispersion, or increasing deposition rates, but little attention has been paid to the latter as a pollution control method. Both NO(2) and PM are deposited onto surfaces at rates that vary according to the nature of the surface; deposition rates to vegetation are much higher than those to hard, built surfaces. Previously, city-scale studies have suggested that deposition to vegetation can make a very modest improvement (<5%) to urban air quality. However, few studies take full account of the interplay between urban form and vegetation, specifically the enhanced residence time of air in street canyons. This study shows that increasing deposition by the planting of vegetation in street canyons can reduce street-level concentrations in those canyons by as much as 40% for NO(2) and 60% for PM. Substantial street-level air quality improvements can be gained through action at the scale of a single street canyon or across city-sized areas of canyons. Moreover, vegetation will continue to offer benefits in the reduction of pollution even if the traffic source is removed from city centers. Thus, judicious use of vegetation can create an efficient urban pollutant filter, yielding rapid and sustained improvements in street-level air quality in dense urban areas.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Nitrogen management is essential to prevent tropical oil palm plantations from causing ground-level ozone pollution

C. N. Hewitt; A. R. MacKenzie; P. Di Carlo; C. Di Marco; J. R. Dorsey; M. J. Evans; D. Fowler; Martin Gallagher; J. R. Hopkins; C. E. Jones; Ben Langford; James Lee; Alastair C. Lewis; S. F. Lim; J. B. McQuaid; Pawel K. Misztal; Sarah Moller; Paul S. Monks; E. Nemitz; D. E. Oram; Susan M. Owen; Gavin Phillips; Thomas A. M. Pugh; J. A. Pyle; C. E. Reeves; James Ryder; Jambery Siong; U. Skiba; D. Stewart

More than half the worlds rainforest has been lost to agriculture since the Industrial Revolution. Among the most widespread tropical crops is oil palm (Elaeis guineensis): global production now exceeds 35 million tonnes per year. In Malaysia, for example, 13% of land area is now oil palm plantation, compared with 1% in 1974. There are enormous pressures to increase palm oil production for food, domestic products, and, especially, biofuels. Greater use of palm oil for biofuel production is predicated on the assumption that palm oil is an “environmentally friendly” fuel feedstock. Here we show, using measurements and models, that oil palm plantations in Malaysia directly emit more oxides of nitrogen and volatile organic compounds than rainforest. These compounds lead to the production of ground-level ozone (O3), an air pollutant that damages human health, plants, and materials, reduces crop productivity, and has effects on the Earths climate. Our measurements show that, at present, O3 concentrations do not differ significantly over rainforest and adjacent oil palm plantation landscapes. However, our model calculations predict that if concentrations of oxides of nitrogen in Borneo are allowed to reach those currently seen over rural North America and Europe, ground-level O3 concentrations will reach 100 parts per billion (109) volume (ppbv) and exceed levels known to be harmful to human health. Our study provides an early warning of the urgent need to develop policies that manage nitrogen emissions if the detrimental effects of palm oil production on air quality and climate are to be avoided.


Global Change Biology | 2016

Global change pressures on soils from land use and management

Pete Smith; Joanna Isobel House; Mercedes M. C. Bustamante; Jaroslava Sobocká; R.J. Harper; Genxing Pan; Paul C. West; Joanna M. Clark; Tapan Kumar Adhya; Cornelia Rumpel; Keith Paustian; P.J. Kuikman; M. Francesca Cotrufo; Jane A. Elliott; R. W. McDowell; Robert I. Griffiths; Susumu Asakawa; Alberte Bondeau; Atul K. Jain; Jeroen Meersmans; Thomas A. M. Pugh

Soils are subject to varying degrees of direct or indirect human disturbance, constituting a major global change driver. Factoring out natural from direct and indirect human influence is not always straightforward, but some human activities have clear impacts. These include land-use change, land management and land degradation (erosion, compaction, sealing and salinization). The intensity of land use also exerts a great impact on soils, and soils are also subject to indirect impacts arising from human activity, such as acid deposition (sulphur and nitrogen) and heavy metal pollution. In this critical review, we report the state-of-the-art understanding of these global change pressures on soils, identify knowledge gaps and research challenges and highlight actions and policies to minimize adverse environmental impacts arising from these global change drivers. Soils are central to considerations of what constitutes sustainable intensification. Therefore, ensuring that vulnerable and high environmental value soils are considered when protecting important habitats and ecosystems, will help to reduce the pressure on land from global change drivers. To ensure that soils are protected as part of wider environmental efforts, a global soil resilience programme should be considered, to monitor, recover or sustain soil fertility and function, and to enhance the ecosystem services provided by soils. Soils cannot, and should not, be considered in isolation of the ecosystems that they underpin and vice versa. The role of soils in supporting ecosystems and natural capital needs greater recognition. The lasting legacy of the International Year of Soils in 2015 should be to put soils at the centre of policy supporting environmental protection and sustainable development.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Multisectoral climate impact hotspots in a warming world

Franziska Piontek; Christoph Müller; Thomas A. M. Pugh; Douglas B. Clark; Delphine Deryng; Joshua Elliott; Felipe de Jesus Colón González; Martina Flörke; Christian Folberth; Wietse Franssen; Katja Frieler; Andrew D. Friend; Simon N. Gosling; Deborah Hemming; Nikolay Khabarov; Hyungjun Kim; Mark R. Lomas; Yoshimitsu Masaki; Matthias Mengel; Andrew P. Morse; Kathleen Neumann; Kazuya Nishina; Sebastian Ostberg; Ryan Pavlick; Alex C. Ruane; Jacob Schewe; Erwin Schmid; Tobias Stacke; Qiuhong Tang; Zachary Tessler

The impacts of global climate change on different aspects of humanity’s diverse life-support systems are complex and often difficult to predict. To facilitate policy decisions on mitigation and adaptation strategies, it is necessary to understand, quantify, and synthesize these climate-change impacts, taking into account their uncertainties. Crucial to these decisions is an understanding of how impacts in different sectors overlap, as overlapping impacts increase exposure, lead to interactions of impacts, and are likely to raise adaptation pressure. As a first step we develop herein a framework to study coinciding impacts and identify regional exposure hotspots. This framework can then be used as a starting point for regional case studies on vulnerability and multifaceted adaptation strategies. We consider impacts related to water, agriculture, ecosystems, and malaria at different levels of global warming. Multisectoral overlap starts to be seen robustly at a mean global warming of 3 °C above the 1980–2010 mean, with 11% of the world population subject to severe impacts in at least two of the four impact sectors at 4 °C. Despite these general conclusions, we find that uncertainty arising from the impact models is considerable, and larger than that from the climate models. In a low probability-high impact worst-case assessment, almost the whole inhabited world is at risk for multisectoral pressures. Hence, there is a pressing need for an increased research effort to develop a more comprehensive understanding of impacts, as well as for the development of policy measures under existing uncertainty.


Nature Communications | 2017

Consistent negative response of US crops to high temperatures in observations and crop models

Bernhard Schauberger; Sotirios Archontoulis; Almut Arneth; Juraj Balkovič; Philippe Ciais; Delphine Deryng; Joshua Elliott; Christian Folberth; Nikolay Khabarov; Christoph Müller; Thomas A. M. Pugh; Susanne Rolinski; Sibyll Schaphoff; Erwin Schmid; Wang X; Wolfram Schlenker; Katja Frieler

High temperatures are detrimental to crop yields and could lead to global warming-driven reductions in agricultural productivity. To assess future threats, the majority of studies used process-based crop models, but their ability to represent effects of high temperature has been questioned. Here we show that an ensemble of nine crop models reproduces the observed average temperature responses of US maize, soybean and wheat yields. Each day >30 °C diminishes maize and soybean yields by up to 6% under rainfed conditions. Declines observed in irrigated areas, or simulated assuming full irrigation, are weak. This supports the hypothesis that water stress induced by high temperatures causes the decline. For wheat a negative response to high temperature is neither observed nor simulated under historical conditions, since critical temperatures are rarely exceeded during the growing season. In the future, yields are modelled to decline for all three crops at temperatures >30 °C. Elevated CO2 can only weakly reduce these yield losses, in contrast to irrigation.


Environmental Research Letters | 2015

Simulated carbon emissions from land-use change are substantially enhanced by accounting for agricultural management

Thomas A. M. Pugh; Almut Arneth; Stefan Olin; Anders Ahlström; Anita D. Bayer; Kees Klein Goldewijk; Mats Lindeskog; Guy Schurgers

It is over three decades since a large terrestrial carbon sink (S-T) was first reported. The magnitude of the net sink is now relatively well known, and its importance for dampening atmospheric CO2 accumulation, and hence climate change, widely recognised. But the contributions of underlying processes are not well defined, particularly the role of emissions from land-use change (E-LUC) versus the biospheric carbon uptake (S-L; S-T. = S-L - E-LUC). One key aspect of the interplay of E-LUC and SL is the role of agricultural processes in land-use change emissions, which has not yet been clearly quantified at the global scale. Here we assess the effect of representing agricultural land management in a dynamic global vegetation model. Accounting for harvest, grazing and tillage resulted in cumulative E-LUC since 1850 ca. 70% larger than in simulations ignoring these processes, but also changed the timescale over which these emissions occurred and led to underestimations of the carbon sequestered by possible future reforestation actions. The vast majority of Earth system models in the recent IPCC Fifth Assessment Report omit these processes, suggesting either an overestimation in their present-day ST, or an underestimation of SL, of up to 1.0 Pg Ca-1. Management processes influencing crop productivity per se are important for food supply, but were found to have little influence on E-LUC. (Less)


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2011

The atmospheric chemistry of trace gases and particulate matter emitted by different land uses in Borneo

A. R. MacKenzie; Ben Langford; Thomas A. M. Pugh; N. H. Robinson; Pawel K. Misztal; Dwayne E. Heard; James Lee; Alastair C. Lewis; C. E. Jones; J. R. Hopkins; Gavin Phillips; Paul S. Monks; A. Karunaharan; K. E. Hornsby; V. Nicolas-Perea; Hugh Coe; A. M. Gabey; Martin Gallagher; L. K. Whalley; P. M. Edwards; M. J. Evans; Daniel Stone; Trevor Ingham; R. Commane; Kate Furneaux; J. B. McQuaid; E. Nemitz; Yap Kok Seng; D. Fowler; J. A. Pyle

We report measurements of atmospheric composition over a tropical rainforest and over a nearby oil palm plantation in Sabah, Borneo. The primary vegetation in each of the two landscapes emits very different amounts and kinds of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), resulting in distinctive VOC fingerprints in the atmospheric boundary layer for both landscapes. VOCs over the Borneo rainforest are dominated by isoprene and its oxidation products, with a significant additional contribution from monoterpenes. Rather than consuming the main atmospheric oxidant, OH, these high concentrations of VOCs appear to maintain OH, as has been observed previously over Amazonia. The boundary-layer characteristics and mixing ratios of VOCs observed over the Borneo rainforest are different to those measured previously over Amazonia. Compared with the Bornean rainforest, air over the oil palm plantation contains much more isoprene, monoterpenes are relatively less important, and the flower scent, estragole, is prominent. Concentrations of nitrogen oxides are greater above the agro-industrial oil palm landscape than over the rainforest, and this leads to changes in some secondary pollutant mixing ratios (but not, currently, differences in ozone). Secondary organic aerosol over both landscapes shows a significant contribution from isoprene. Primary biological aerosol dominates the super-micrometre aerosol over the rainforest and is likely to be sensitive to land-use change, since the fungal source of the bioaerosol is closely linked to above-ground biodiversity.


Environmental Research Letters | 2015

Implications of climate mitigation for future agricultural production

Christoph Müller; Joshua Elliott; James Chryssanthacopoulos; Delphine Deryng; Christian Folberth; Thomas A. M. Pugh; Erwin Schmid

Climate change is projected to negatively impact biophysical agricultural productivity in much of the world. Actions taken to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and mitigate future climate changes, are thus of central importance for agricultural production. Climate impacts are, however, not unidirectional; some crops in some regions (primarily higher latitudes) are projected to benefit, particularly if increased atmospheric carbon dioxide is assumed to strongly increase crop productivity at large spatial and temporal scales. Climate mitigation measures that are implemented by reducing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations lead to reduction both in the strength of climate change and in the benefits of carbon dioxide fertilization. Consequently, analysis of the effects of climate mitigation on agricultural productivity must address not only regions for which mitigation is likely to reduce or even reverse climate damage. There are also regions that are likely to see increased crop yields due to climate change, which may lose these added potentials under mitigation action. Comparing data from the most comprehensive archive of crop yield projections publicly available, we find that climate mitigation leads to overall benefits from avoided damages at the global scale and especially in many regions that are already at risk of food insecurity today. Ignoring controversial carbon dioxide fertilization effects on crop productivity, we find that for the median projection aggressive mitigation could eliminate ~81% of the negative impacts of climate change on biophysical agricultural productivity globally by the end of the century. In this case, the benefits of mitigation typically extend well into temperate regions, but vary by crop and underlying climate mode projections. Should large benefits to crop yields from carbon dioxide fertilization be realized, the effects of mitigation become much more mixed, though still positive globally and beneficial in many food insecure countries.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2011

The impact of local surface changes in Borneo on atmospheric composition at wider spatial scales: Coastal processes, land-use change and air quality

J. A. Pyle; N. J. Warwick; N. R. P. Harris; Mohd Radzi Abas; A. T. Archibald; M. J. Ashfold; Kirsti Ashworth; M. P. Barkley; G. D. Carver; Kelly Chance; J. R. Dorsey; D. Fowler; Siegfried Gonzi; B. Gostlow; C. N. Hewitt; Thomas P. Kurosu; James Lee; S. B. Langford; G. P. Mills; Sarah Moller; A. R. MacKenzie; Alistair J. Manning; Pawel K. Misztal; Mohd Shahrul Mohd Nadzir; E. Nemitz; Hannah Newton; L. M. O'Brien; S. Ong; D. E. Oram; Paul I. Palmer

We present results from the OP3 campaign in Sabah during 2008 that allow us to study the impact of local emission changes over Borneo on atmospheric composition at the regional and wider scale. OP3 constituent data provide an important constraint on model performance. Treatment of boundary layer processes is highlighted as an important area of model uncertainty. Model studies of land-use change confirm earlier work, indicating that further changes to intensive oil palm agriculture in South East Asia, and the tropics in general, could have important impacts on air quality, with the biggest factor being the concomitant changes in NOx emissions. With the model scenarios used here, local increases in ozone of around 50 per cent could occur. We also report measurements of short-lived brominated compounds around Sabah suggesting that oceanic (and, especially, coastal) emission sources dominate locally. The concentration of bromine in short-lived halocarbons measured at the surface during OP3 amounted to about 7 ppt, setting an upper limit on the amount of these species that can reach the lower stratosphere.

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Almut Arneth

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Christoph Müller

Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research

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Christian Folberth

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis

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Nikolay Khabarov

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis

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