While many growing areas are facing increased climate risks, the top three largest apple-producing counties in the U.S. were among the most impacted: Yakima in Washington, Kent in Michigan and Wayne in New York. In particular, Yakima County, the largest of the three with more than 48,800 acres of apple orchards, has seen harmful trends in five of the six metrics the researchers analyzed.
“We shouldn’t take the delicious apples we love to consume for granted,” said Deepti Singh, a WSU climate scientist and the study’s corresponding author. “Changing climate conditions over multiple parts of the growth cycle pose potentially compounding threats to the production and quality of apples. Moving forward, it would be helpful to think about adaptations at different stages of apple growth that can minimize overall harmful impacts.” Read more at Washington State University
Source: ENN
The post Prime Apple-Growing Areas in Us Face Increasing Climate Risks appeared first on Vastuullisuusuutiset.fi.