Heterogeneous impacts of fire-sourced ozone (O3) pollution on global crop yields in the future climate scenarios

Rui Li, Yumeng Shao, Dongmei Tang*, Yining Gao, Hongfang Zhao*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Wildfire smoke often aggravates the ozone (O3) pollution and negatively affect crop yields. To date, the global impact of fire-sourced O3 exposure on crop yields still remained unknown. To address this issue, a multi-stage model was developed to quantify the global wildfire-induced ambient O3 concentrations in the future scenarios. The results suggested that the relationship between observed K+ and levoglucosan levels with simulated fire-sourced maximum daily average 8 h (MDA8) O3 concentration reached 0.67 and 0.73, respectively, indicating the robustness of fire-sourced O3 estimate. In both of historical and future scenarios, Sub-Sahara Africa (SS: 14.9±8.4 (historical) and 18.3±9.6 (mean of the future scenarios) μgm-3) and South America (SA: 4.0±2.5 and 4.7±3.2 μgm-3) showed the highest fire-sourced MDA8 O3 concentrations among all of the regions. However, the crop production losses (CPL) caused by O3 exposure reached the highest values in China due to very high total crop yields and relatively high wildfire-induced MDA8 O3 levels. Moreover, CPL in China was sensitive to emission scenario, indicating the effective emission control could largely decrease fire-sourced O3 damage to crop. In contrast, both of SS and SA even showed the higher CPL in low-carbon scenario (SSP1-2.6), suggesting more stringent control measures are required to offset the wildfire contribution. Our findings call for attention on the threat to future global food security from the absence of pollution mitigation and the persistence of global warming.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)14501-14511
Number of pages11
JournalAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Volume25
Issue number21
DOIs
StatePublished - 4 Nov 2025

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