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Random Forests for Global and Regional Crop Yield Predictions
Author(s) -
Jig Han Jeong,
Jonathan P. Resop,
Nathaniel D. Mueller,
David H. Fleisher,
Kyungdahm Yun,
Ethan E. Butler,
Dennis Timlin,
Kyo-Moon Shim,
James Gerber,
Vangimalla R. Reddy,
SooHyung Kim
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0156571
Subject(s) - yield (engineering) , crop yield , random forest , crop , agriculture , linear regression , statistics , mathematics , grain yield , agronomy , environmental science , agricultural engineering , computer science , machine learning , ecology , biology , materials science , metallurgy , engineering
Accurate predictions of crop yield are critical for developing effective agricultural and food policies at the regional and global scales. We evaluated a machine-learning method, Random Forests (RF), for its ability to predict crop yield responses to climate and biophysical variables at global and regional scales in wheat, maize, and potato in comparison with multiple linear regressions (MLR) serving as a benchmark. We used crop yield data from various sources and regions for model training and testing: 1) gridded global wheat grain yield, 2) maize grain yield from US counties over thirty years, and 3) potato tuber and maize silage yield from the northeastern seaboard region. RF was found highly capable of predicting crop yields and outperformed MLR benchmarks in all performance statistics that were compared. For example, the root mean square errors (RMSE) ranged between 6 and 14% of the average observed yield with RF models in all test cases whereas these values ranged from 14% to 49% for MLR models. Our results show that RF is an effective and versatile machine-learning method for crop yield predictions at regional and global scales for its high accuracy and precision, ease of use, and utility in data analysis. RF may result in a loss of accuracy when predicting the extreme ends or responses beyond the boundaries of the training data.

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