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  Corn Belt Shifting North With Climate Change
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Last EditedRP  Oct 16, 2012 02:36pm
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MediaNewspaper - San Antonio Express-News
News DateTuesday, October 16, 2012 04:25:00 AM UTC0:0
DescriptionJoe Waldman is saying goodbye to corn after yet another hot, dry summer convinced him that rainfall won't be there when he needs it anymore.

“I finally just said uncle,” said Waldman, 52, surveying his stunted crop about 100 miles north of Dodge City, Kansas.

Instead, he will expand sorghum, which requires less rain; let some fields remain fallow; and restrict corn to irrigated fields.

While farmers nationwide planted the most corn this year since 1937, growers in Kansas sowed the fewest acres in three years, instead turning to less-thirsty crops such as wheat, sorghum and even triticale, a wheat-rye mix popular in Poland.

Meanwhile, corn acreage in Manitoba, a Canadian province about 700 miles north of Kansas, has nearly doubled over the past decade because of weather changes and higher prices.

Shifts such as these reflect a view among food producers that this summer's drought in the United States, the worst in half a century, isn't a random disaster. It's a glimpse of a future altered by climate change that will affect worldwide production.
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