Border Transgressions

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

There is a new paper out in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences called Linkages among climate change, crop yields and Mexico–US cross-border migration (hereinafter L2010). It has Supplementary Online Information (SOI) here. The editor of the paper is (the late) Dr. Stephen Schneider.

The paper basically advances the following theory of linkages:

Climate Change —> Reduced Mexican Crop Yields —> Migration to US

Hmmmm … their Abstract says:

Climate change is expected to cause mass human migration, including immigration across international borders. This study quantitatively examines the linkages among variations in climate, agricultural yields, and people’s migration responses by using an instrumental variables approach. Our method allows us to identify the relationship between crop yields and migration without explicitly controlling for all other confounding factors. Using state-level data from Mexico, we find a significant effect of climate-driven changes in crop yields on the rate of emigration to the United States. … Depending on the warming scenarios used and adaptation levels assumed, with other factors held constant, by approximately the year 2080, climate change is estimated to induce 1.4 to 6.7 million adult Mexicans (or 2% to 10% of the current population aged 15–65 y) to emigrate as a result of declines in agricultural productivity alone.

Although the results cannot be mechanically extrapolated to other areas and time periods, our findings are significant from a global perspective given that many regions, especially developing countries, are expected to experience significant declines in agricultural yields as a result of projected warming.

YIKES! … scary. Makes a man think seriously about mitigation.

Figure 1. Large-Scale Device for the Mitigation of the Effects of Climate Change. However, it appears that not everyone is convinced of the need for such climate mitigation, as the accompanying text says “Police in the Mexican border city of Tijuana say they have arrested six men for stealing pieces of the U.S. border fence to sell as scrap metal.”

I often divide things into the good, the bad, and the interesting. Regarding this study, first, the good. The authors have done a workmanlike job of pointing to the data that they used, all of which is online. This is to be highly commended, as it allows a quick determination of the validity of their work.

Next, the bad.

Because they were clear about their data, I was able to replicate their results exactly for the corn yields. My practice is to make replication the first step in any analysis of this type. It verifies whether they have done what they say they have done. In doing so, I discovered a most curious thing.

First, a small digression. “Yield” is how many tonnes of a crop are produced per hectare (or acre) harvested. Yield is affected by a number of things, including location, soil quality, and climate. If the yield in a certain location starts to fall, this is an indication that something is going wrong in the farming cycle in that location.

The curiosity that I discovered is that the paper calculates “yield” in a way that I had never seen. Yield is defined as how much crop production you get for every hectare (or acre) that was harvested. The authors, on the other hand, calculated yield as the amount produced for every hectare (or acre) that was planted. This often yields a very different number.

The source of their data is here.  Click on the “Maiz Grano” (Corn) in the first column, mid page. On the resulting page, click “Producción” (Production), second button from left. Then look in the far left column and click on the “Anuario” (Annual) button. Select 2004 as the year (“Año”) and press the “Consulta” button.

Now take a look at the data for 2004. The headings are:

Ubicación, Sup. Sembrada, Sup. Cosechada, Producción, Rendimiento

Or in English

Location, Area Planted (ha), Area Harvested (ha), Production (tonnes), Yield (tonnes/ha)

Over the period in question (1995-2004) Baja California averaged about 3 tonnes of corn per hectare. For Baja in 2004, their site says

BAJA CALIFORNIA, 592 hectares planted, 10 hectares harvested, 25 tonnes produced, yield 2.5 tonnes/ha

Note that, in common with other authorities, the Mexican web site itself calculated yield as production divided by area harvested, not divided by area planted. This is the normal definition of “yield” used by all other analyists. For example, from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) web site glossary we have (emphasis mine):

Title: Crop yield

Definition:

Harvested production per unit of harvested area for crop products. In most of the cases yield data are not recorded but obtained by dividing the production data by the data on area harvested. …

“Harvested area” in turn is defined as:

Title: Area harvested

Definition:

Data refer to the area from which a crop is gathered. Area harvested, therefore, excludes the area from which, although sown or planted, there was no harvest due to damage, failure, etc. …

From this, it is clear that the authors of L2010 are not calculating the yield correctly. They have calculated the yield for Baja 2004 as 25 tonnes / 592 hectares planted = 0.04 tonnes/ha, a meaningless result. This is why yield is always calculated based on the area harvested, not based on the area planted. Obviously, something happened in Baja in 2004 that wiped out most of the corn crop. But for the remaining area, the yield was 25 tonnes / 10 hectares harvested = 2.5 tonnes/ha, not far from normal.

Overall, this is a very significant error. To take one example of the effect of the error, Figure 2 shows the correlations between Mexican annual temperatures and corn crop yields (correctly and incorrectly calculated).

Figure 2. State by state correlations between annual temperature and corn crop yields, 1995-2004. “Yield” is production / area harvested. “Incorrect Yield” is production / area planted, as used in L2010.

Note that in some States (Aguascalientes, Campeche, Yucatan), one dataset shows a very small correlation between temperature and yield, while the other shows 20%-40% correlation. In some cases (Nueva Leon, Queretaro, San Luis Potosi) one shows positive and one shows negative correlation. Overall, there are many results which are significantly different.

Because the correlations of the yield are central to their analysis, this error invalidates the paper and requires the recalculation of all the relationships. Remember that their thesis is:

Climate Change —> Reduced Mexican Crop Yields —> Migration to US

Note that there are two separate mathematical relationships in their claim. One relates climate change (temperature and rainfall) to changes in yield. The other relates changes in yield to migration rates. An error in the yield, therefore, requires a recalculation of both relationships, with new error bounds, etc.

Since the original web site is in Spanish, this error may simply be a misunderstanding of what the web site says. However, that slides over the question of why they didn’t simply use the yield figures provided in their data source …

I have posted up the Area Planted, Area Harvested, Production, Annual Temperature, and Yield figures here as an Excel spreadsheet. To determine which one they used (area planted or area harvested), it is necessary to take 5-year averages of the data (1995-1999 and 2000-2004) and compare the answers to Table S1 of the Supplementary Online Information. I can reproduce their results only by the incorrect usage of area planted instead of area harvested. Note that “Log Corn Yield” in Table S1 of their paper is the natural log (ln) of the yield.

I have pointed out some good about the study, and some bad, so onwards to the interesting. One interesting thing to me is the variety of responses of different states to increased or decreased temperatures. In a third of the Mexican states, warmer is better for corn (positive correlation). In two-thirds of the Mexican states, on the other hand, cooler is better for corn. Hmmm …

Another interesting thing is the change in the Mexican country average yield for corn. Figure 3 shows both the country average yield and average annual temperature for 1995-2005:

Figure 3. Mexican Corn Yield (red line, left scale) and Temperature (blue line, right scale) Photo Source

Fig. 3 highlights one of the real shortcomings of their study. This is the very short time period that they are investigating. However, taken at face value, this graph does not give much credence to the idea that increasing temperatures will reduce Mexican corn yield … (note that I make no claim that this relationship is meaningful or statistically significant. I only say it does not support the authors’ argument.)

As noted above, there are two mathematical relationships involved in their claim. One is temperature/precipitation vs yield, and the other is yield vs emigration. For the yield vs. emigration, the Mexican dataset is short. So I understand that they have to make do with what they have. But yield versus temperature has a much longer dataset. The temperatures from their source span 1971 to the present, and the state-by-state crop data goes back to 1980. So they should have established the corn yield/temperature link using all of the data available (1980-2009), even though the other yield/emigration link has so much less data.

How does something like this get published? I suspect that this is another example of a member of PNAS using their “Proceedings” publication as a vanity press with little in the way of peer review. The article is edited by Stephen Schneider, who also edited the other recent “blacklist” paper, so it’s clandestinely flying across the border under the peer-review radar …

Hopefully, this will be the last of the posthumous Schneider “science” for us to deal with. The only good thing about Schneider was that when I saw his name on something, I knew I could likely find errors in it … made my job that much easier.

Look, I don’t like to speak ill of the dead. Stephen Schneider was probably a nice man who loved his family and petted puppies and brought the homeless blankets and dinner. But his general claims were often a “post-normal science” abomination, and his scientific work (as in the present instance) was sometimes very slipshod.

In particular, Schneider is noted for his statement regarding the obligations of scientists:

To capture the public imagination, we [scientists] have to offer up some scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements and little mention of any doubts one might have. Each of us has to decide the right balance between being effective, and being honest. This ‘double ethical bind’ we frequently find ourselves in cannot be solved by any formula. Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest. I hope that means being both.

To me, the most scary scenario is scientists who balance their honesty with effectiveness, or with anything else for that matter. I don’t want scientists who make little mention of their doubts. I don’t want scary scenarios from scientists, that’s why God made Hollywood and the BBC.

I want scientists who are as honest as possible, about their doubts and everything else. Schneider’s view, that scientists should balance honesty and effectiveness, is extremely and insidiously dangerous to science.

So, as un-PC as my view might be, I am overjoyed to see the last post-mortem gasp of Schneider’s apocalyptic alarmism. Am I glad he is dead? No way. As the poet said,

Each man’s death diminishes me,

For I am involved in mankind.

I am very happy, however, that he is no longer teaching at Stanford, that he is no longer writing garbage for me to wade through, and that he is no longer busily filling up the porches of the Stanford students’ ears with “cursed hebenon” …

My regards to all,

w.

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CRS, Dr.P.H.
July 28, 2010 10:14 pm

Thanks, Willis!
According to my colleagues at University of Illinois, our state will probably be a net winner assuming AGW (increased temperatures & carbon dioxide concentrations) actually occurs. Therefore, your formula may be modified as follows:
Climate Change —> Increased Illinois Crop Yields —> Migration to US
Unlike many, I don’t have that many problems with the migration issue. My town is full of recent immigrants & they are decent folks. We just need to fix the process.

July 28, 2010 10:45 pm

Neo: July 28, 2010 at 4:39 pm
It’s probably possible to write a pervasive paper that “Global Warming” causes ordinarily sane politicians to act in insane ways, but who would fund it ?
You’d first need funding to find ordinarily-sane politicians — the only sane one we have in New Jersey is the governor.

July 28, 2010 10:58 pm

Fascinating … An obvious attempt to bring the radical right over to the side of the radical left. (Like that would ever happen.) Me? I like Mexicans. I’ve spent quite a lot of time in Mexico working with engineers, business people, even farmers. Salt of the earth and very smart hard-woring people.
[Tongue in cheek.] I’m more worried about those damn Canadians. We’re highly dependent on their oil. We spend our precious dollars (which we partly earn by under-paying Mexicans) on buying oil from Canadians. We buy more oil from them then we do from anyplace else, even Mexico. And we buy more oil from Mexioc than we do from the Middle East. But those damn Canadians spend all our oil dollars on giving their children free health care, so they have pretty teeth and poofy hair, and a good education, so they have posh accents. Then they march those kids over our border to take all the GOOD “American” jobs. Jobs like TV news anchoring, acting (I repeat myself), running banks, etc. Heck, if it pays well, and requires good teeth and nice hair, there will be raft loads of those damn, suspiciously un-smelly, Canadians clamoring doing it.
You never see a Canadian doing the super-important jobs like cleaning toilets, mowing lawns or building things. Mexican immigrants (many of whom aren’t actually Mexican ) will work hard for low pay. They’ll work even harder for a good wage. Just like the Native American, English, Irish, Italian, French, Pollish , Serbian, Croatian, German, etc., immigrans who cleaned the toilets before the Mexicans. Today we call us U.S. people.
Plus, have you ever noticed how so many Canadians claim not to belive in global warming? Now we know why. They want warming to drive us up to their future balmy climate so we can clean their toilets. The bastards.
: )
– dT

Rational Debate
July 29, 2010 12:38 am

re: Gail Combs says: July 28, 2010 at 6:06 pm
That must be why Al Gore bought his seaside mansion in the home of the earthquakes…
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Speaking of Al’s lovely seaside mansion… does anyone here know for sure if its beach side v cliff side? The latter rather puts a damper on our using it as evidence of his perfidy…. I dread the thought of mentioning it only to have someone reply, ya, but its 200 ft. up from the sea level on a cliff (doh!). Then I’d just have to look up the figures on the avg monthly electrical usage of his other mansion v. average homes – but I like the sea side one, if legit. Hum… wonder what the avg. electrical usage of his sea side mansion is?

mikael pihlström
July 29, 2010 1:09 am

Willis post
From this, it is clear that the authors of L2010 are not calculating the yield correctly. They have calculated the yield for Baja 2004 as 25 tonnes / 592 hectares planted = 0.04 tonnes/ha, a meaningless result. This is why yield is always calculated based on the area harvested, not based on the area planted. Obviously, something happened in Baja in 2004 that wiped out most of the corn crop. But for the remaining area, the yield was 25 tonnes / 10 hectares harvested = 2.5 tonnes/ha, not far from normal.
————-
The point is: what drives the movement of people? If say 50 percent of farmers
ion a region have no crop that year – will they stay because on a minority of farms
the yield was average? Or will they take it more personally and consider migration?
Perhaps unclear use of terms, but the argument can still be valid.
average

July 29, 2010 1:57 am

Jim D: July 28, 2010 at 10:07 pm
Have you ruled out that pests/fungi can relate to climate in any way? Hint: how about pine bark beetle?
I was gonna say something snarky about pine bark beetles and corn, but I’ll just observe that beetle infestations only explode in the absence of wildfires, which normally limit the population. And diseases usually only take hold in corn that’s been *drought* stressed, not heat stressed.
Willis also didn’t want to include fires; not so sure about that one either.
Smart move. Even GISS hasn’t predicted that AGW will cause wildfires to start ravaging corn fields.
If the additional factors leading to non-harvesting were truly random, they would have destroyed rather than enhanced the correlations.
You can pretty much count on a consistent amount of damage from corn pests. Even though the amount of damage they do each year will vary by individual species, the overall loss will be relatively constant, unless the population of one particular group explodes.

Geir in Norway
July 29, 2010 2:13 am

Thanks, Willis, for your most important post.
The no. 1 reason for giving the Nobel Peace Prize to Al Gore and the Climatists in IPCC was:
– that they exposed the threat to peace by immigrants fleeing their countries (in the developing world) to other countries (in the developed world) because of global warming.
And thus, Al Gore and the Climatists made the world aware that it must work to keep the people where they are, thus avoiding war, famine, riots, etc. That would keep the world a better place.
Therefore, in order to keep people where they are, there must be a transfer of wealth from developed countries to developing countries, and that’s where the carbon taxes come in.
And all this must be controlled by a super-national force, which can only be the UN.
Al Gore and the Climatists sounds like a popular 60s doo-wop group, doesn’t it?
Willis attacks the reasoning at the heart of the matter with global warming. The thing is, the climatists know that in itself, global warming may not be dangerous. But the illegal immigration and the wars and the riots … ought to be avoided. Control, control!

Joe Lalonde
July 29, 2010 4:05 am

Willis,
Excellent work!
This is the type of example of shoddy science I have been trying to fight in other areas.
Cherry picking to make a point rather than follow ALL the variables to a TRUE conclusion.
I would guess if the research was NOT to create sensationalism, it wouldn’t be published.

Jimbo
July 29, 2010 4:08 am

Yesterday I put this story up on tips and notes hoping Willis Eschenbach would deal with it as I smelt a rat. Thank you Willis.
I also found out one interesting fact which is that that Mexico was where the agricultural revolution started.

“By 1963, 95 percent of Mexico’s wheat lands grew the new semi-dwarf seeds of the green revolution. The result: a harvest six times the 1944 level, the year Borlaug arrived in Mexico.
Even Borlaug had trouble believing the adaptability of the new seed. Test plots around the world began to show similarly dramatic gains in yield. Climates from Sweden to Argentina would prove acceptable to the new seed. Borlaug had more than accomplished the goal of the Mexican project. Mexico was not only self-sufficient in wheat, it had grain to export. Mexican farmers, who a few years earlier didn’t know how to use fertilizer, became international seed dealers, supplying the green revolution in other countries.” http://www.agbioworld.org/biotech-info/topics/borlaug/minnesota.html

Norman Borlaug and the agricultural revolution
http://search.umn.edu/s/umnews/index.php?query=borlaug+mexico&x=21&y=13
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gb_fsKObiTI2Quwargw4snaBhKuAD9AM79R81
http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/sci-tech/09-borlaug-father-of-green-revolution-dead–szh-04

AllenC
July 29, 2010 4:34 am

What bothers me the most about reports like this is the unstated assertion that some how humans can change the climate.
If we scare enough people about the effects of climate change (nobody I know has ever denied that it is changing), then we can scare them into doing anything we want – like paying carbon taxes and sending money to all these third world nations, etc.

Gail Combs
July 29, 2010 5:03 am

Jim D says:
July 28, 2010 at 10:07 pm
…..Have you ruled out that pests/fungi can relate to climate in any way? Hint: how about pine bark beetle? Willis also didn’t want to include fires; not so sure about that one either. If the additional factors leading to non-harvesting were truly random, they would have destroyed rather than enhanced the correlations.
________________________________________________________________
Then you have to start disentangling the El Nino, La Nina effects too.
By the way, are you going to conclude the USA Dust Bowl of the 1930s was caused by “global warming” too??? The effect of “climate” on crops was devastating.
“…The Dust Bowl got its name after Black Sunday, April 14, 1935. More and more dust storms had been blowing up in the years leading up to that day. In 1932, 14 dust storms were recorded on the Plains. In 1933, there were 38 storms. By 1934, it was estimated that 100 million acres of farmland had lost all or most of the topsoil to the winds. By April 1935, there had been weeks of dust storms, but the cloud that appeared on the horizon that Sunday was the worst. Winds were clocked at 60 mph. Then it hit.
“The impact is like a shovelful of fine sand flung against the face,”..
The impact of the Dust Bowl was felt all over the U.S…. one of FDR’s advisors, Hugh Hammond Bennett, was in Washington D.C. on his way to testify before Congress about the need for soil conservation legislation…. As a dusty gloom spread over the nation’s capital and blotted out the sun, Bennett explained, “This, gentlemen, is what I have been talking about.”

The Dust Bowl had estimates of over 7,000 left dead from dust pneumonia and other dust related deaths. 2.5million left homeless, or forced to migrate.
Gee shouldn’t we conclude that the dust bowl was caused by CO2 emmision – global warming??? But before you can do that you have to figure out what graphs to use.
US temperature graphs:
http://i31.tinypic.com/5vov3p.jpg
http://i31.tinypic.com/2149sg0.gif
CO2 graph:
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2010/06/anthropogenic_emissions_1850_2005.jpg

Jimbo
July 29, 2010 5:04 am

Ray says:
July 28, 2010 at 2:18 pm
What about…
Mexican Immigrants –> Bad US economy –> Mexicans go back to Mexico.


Not only the economy but harsh new immigration laws. CLICK

“This Thursday will mark day one of implementation of Arizona’s harsh new law that makes it a state crime to be in the state illegally. Not surprisingly, immigrants are fleeing the state, with reports of shops in heavily Latino areas being shuttered, immigrants purchasing large duffel bags for hasty departures, Latino children leaving schools and apartment buildings quickly being vacated. “

/sarc on/ Global warming in Arizona is causing Mexicans to move south!!! / sarc off/
One day you will all realise that it is the FUNDING of climate research that has utterly corrupted the scientific method. Why should WUWT always have to carry out the peer review process?

Tim Clark
July 29, 2010 6:39 am

First off Willis, as a USDA employee I can inform you that we consider yield/acres planted as a good parameter to distinguish crop loss resulting from insufficient water as opposed to crop loss resulting from incompetent production practices (for disaster payment determination. The reasoning is of the many possible explanations for yield loss described here and above (fertilization amount versus cost, insect infestation/damage, late planting, weed competition, improper variety selection, invalid soil preparation techniques, etc. etc. etc.), all of which are under the control of the operator/landowner, precipitation is most “highly likely” the only parameter resulting in yields reduced enough to forego harvesting. In other words, if you have a bad insect problem that is untreated, or don’t apply enough fertilizer, or plant too late because of laziness or wet soil, or plant a cultivar unfit for your soil, or plow the ground rather then other cultivation methods (productivity related to soil organic matter) or irrigate too much or too little, etc. etc., you will still get a yield that is cost effective to harvest. Absolute failures due to temperature are almost always associated with cold. An example of this association is high temperature during pollination (tasseling) can significantly reduce kernel set, but very rarely leads to abandonment. Therefore, since we know precipitation in the USA has increased during the last century, a better parameter to determine abandonment would be an association with precipitation. Is the data available for that? As an aside, evidence suggests that precipitation is also the parameter that is “highly likely” responsible for tree ring growth differences.

Bruce Cobb
July 29, 2010 6:42 am

Poor Schneider. He never did find that balance between selling ones’ scientific soul and simply telling the truth. Telling the truth is always much simpler.

ozspeaksup
July 29, 2010 8:13 am

Gail Combs. my thanks for the brilliant info and links,
and to Willis also, I got the msn9 link sent earlier on this among other insanities and was wild.
your debunking is appreciated.

July 29, 2010 8:15 am

pat: July 28, 2010 at 8:10 pm
In reply, Oppenheimer said the Princeton study found similar results in a second crop-yield study, and the crop reductions predicted for Mexico are typical of what has been predicted for other countries in that latitude.
Liverman said that while she believes climate change could cause widespread migration, she has seen no study documenting it.

Continuing from http://azstarnet.com/news/local/border/article_7a77f457-a50d-5c40-b26a-a8072befedfe.html
“Having studied the problems of Mexican farmers for two decades, she [Diana Liverman] said she has found that a bad economy, the government’s withdrawal of agricultural subsidies and the North American Free Trade Agreement have caused problems far greater than climate change.”
Oppenheimer’s study used a computer model that used hotter and drier as the sole variable.
“A statistical estimator, a tool that uses only the portion of variations in crop yields across states that is predicted by changes in climate (e.g., temperature and rainfall), was used to estimate the sensitivity of emigration to crop yields. Projections of the effect of climate change on crop yield in the future then were used to estimate future migration flows, assuming all other factors except climate would be unchanged.”
http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S28/01/83M53/index.xml

Jim G
July 29, 2010 9:25 am

Willis says:
“Perhaps the “something else” is more useful than yield, although I don’t think so in the context of the paper. But that’s not the point. They claimed to use yield, and didn’t use yield. Bad scientists, no cookies for them.”
That was my point. If you plant 1000 acres but can only harvest 100 due to weather or war or whatever, you can still have a high yield but that misses the point. You need to look at acres planted for your yield number plus you need to know WHY the residual ares were not harvested before you talk about cause and effect. Yield as it is defined per acre harvested has no meaning in this analysis. Then, of course, the light year jump as to the cause of immigration is another problem.

July 29, 2010 10:29 am

Willis Eschenbach says:
July 28, 2010 at 10:04 pm

Jim D says:
July 28, 2010 at 7:50 pm
….
I side with pax and the authors on this one. Why exclude crop failures due to droughts, hail and floods when doing a climate study. Surely the majority of non-harvested crops are due to natural effects like this.

You generally want to exclude such catastrophic effects in most studies of gradual changes, regardless of their cause. This is particularly true when we have absolutely no idea whether the changes are climate related, or are due to low prices, equipment breakdowns, fires, labor strikes, lack of transportation, fungus-infested seeds, plant diseases, or other non-climate reasons.

I’m no agricultural economist, but my inclination would be to agree with Pax and Jim D that product per acre planted is the more meaningful measure of the success of agriculture (provided the numbers are not contrived to maximize subisidies as Theo Goodwin suggests). If an acre was really planted, it was withheld from other crops, grazing, industry, or other land uses. Also, the farmer went to the expense of ploughing or drilling plus the cost of the seed. If it’s not worth harvesting this is an even bigger failure, perhaps, than merely obtaining a low product per acre harvested.
Climate (mostly too little or too much precipitation, but perhaps temperature) can affect both the decision to harvest and the product per acre harvested, so it seems reasonable to wrap the two into one index of product per acre planted. Other factors can also have an effect, but that is why we include a noise term in any model.
[Willis — ]

For example, if we want to see if a nutrition regime improves the speed of a sprinter, we would not want to include the times when the sprinter stumbles coming off the blocks. All that does is include erroneous noise.

If a perverse diet causes a sprinter to stumble off the blocks, that should count against the diet as much as slow times without stumbles.
So while perhaps the article’s definition of “yield” doesn’t correspond to that generally used in this literature, and perhaps a different term, such as “planting yield,” should have been used, I don’t see that this in itself renders the article meaningless.