Dr Kynes
Well-Known Member
stated by somebody who doesnt know dick about farming.well as long as the corn farmers in iowa and south dakota don't mind moving to north dakota, and as long as the north dakotan wheat farmers don't mind packing it up to manitoba, then yeah, rising global temps due to man made activities is no big deal.
i suppose the wheat farmers in north dakota can just swap out their equipment with the south dakotans, and the manitobans with the north dakotans, and so on and so forth and they can all just start growing different crops than they've been growing.
shouldn't really be a problem.
Protip: corn grows in southern mexico, in the tropics, where is is MUCH warmer all year round than iowa
Further Protips: there are many different seasonal wheats, Winter Wheat grows in MUCH cooler temps than Summer Wheat, and vice versa.
with 1 degree of warming (50% natural and 50% "anthropogenic" in the IPCC's exaggerations) every century, it will take millennia for the temperature to adversely effect farming anywhere but the deserts and other marginal terrain.
water is another issue, but that's far too complex to be discussed with a know-nothing.