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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
David Tilman

David Tilman

University of California, Santa Barbara · Environmental Science and Management

Active 1976–2024

h-index185
Citations215.1k
Papers46959 last 5y
Funding$18.1M
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Research topics

  • Environmental science
  • Ecology
  • Business
  • Natural resource economics
  • Economics
  • Geography
  • Environmental resource management
  • Political Science
  • Engineering
  • Meteorology
  • Medicine
  • Environmental protection
  • Environmental health
  • Economic growth
  • Biology

Selected publications

  • Climate change exacerbates the environmental impacts of agriculture

    Science · 2024 · 405 citations

    • Natural resource economics
    • Environmental science
    • Environmental resource management

    Agriculture's global environmental impacts are widely expected to continue expanding, driven by population and economic growth and dietary changes. This Review highlights climate change as an additional amplifier of agriculture's environmental impacts, by reducing agricultural productivity, reducing the efficacy of agrochemicals, increasing soil erosion, accelerating the growth and expanding the range of crop diseases and pests, and increasing land clearing. We identify multiple pathways through which climate change intensifies agricultural greenhouse gas emissions, creating a potentially powerful climate change-reinforcing feedback loop. The challenges raised by climate change underscore the urgent need to transition to sustainable, climate-resilient agricultural systems. This requires investments that both accelerate adoption of proven solutions that provide multiple benefits, and that discover and scale new beneficial processes and food products.

  • Estimating the environmental impacts of 57,000 food products

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2022 · 303 citations

    • Environmental science

    360, 987-992 (2018); Gephart et al., Nature 597, 360-365 (2021)] to derive estimates of a food product's environmental impact across four indicators: greenhouse gas emissions, land use, water stress, and eutrophication potential. Using the approach on 57,000 products in the United Kingdom and Ireland shows food types have low (e.g., sugary beverages, fruits, breads), to intermediate (e.g., many desserts, pastries), to high environmental impacts (e.g., meat, fish, cheese). Incorporating NutriScore reveals more nutritious products are often more environmentally sustainable but there are exceptions to this trend, and foods consumers may view as substitutable can have markedly different impacts. Sensitivity analyses indicate the approach is robust to uncertainty in ingredient composition and in most cases sourcing. This approach provides a step toward enabling consumers, retailers, and policy makers to make informed decisions on the environmental impacts of food products.

  • Air quality–related health damages of food

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2021 · 182 citations

    • Political Science
    • Environmental health
    • Business

    emissions from tillage, field burning, livestock dust, and machinery. Dietary shifts toward more plant-based foods that maintain protein intake and other nutritional needs could reduce agricultural air quality-related mortality by 68 to 83%. In sum, improved livestock and fertilization practices, and dietary shifts could greatly decrease the health impacts of agriculture caused by its contribution to reduced air quality.

  • Global food system emissions could preclude achieving the 1.5° and 2°C climate change targets

    Science · 2020 · 1037 citations

    • Environmental science
    • Business
    • Biology

    The Paris Agreement's goal of limiting the increase in global temperature to 1.5° or 2°C above preindustrial levels requires rapid reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Although reducing emissions from fossil fuels is essential for meeting this goal, other sources of emissions may also preclude its attainment. We show that even if fossil fuel emissions were immediately halted, current trends in global food systems would prevent the achievement of the 1.5°C target and, by the end of the century, threaten the achievement of the 2°C target. Meeting the 1.5°C target requires rapid and ambitious changes to food systems as well as to all nonfood sectors. The 2°C target could be achieved with less-ambitious changes to food systems, but only if fossil fuel and other nonfood emissions are eliminated soon.

  • Restoring Abandoned Farmland to Mitigate Climate Change on a Full Earth

    One Earth · 2020 · 126 citations

    • Natural resource economics
    • Environmental science
    • Business

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Peter B. Reich

    University of Minnesota

    192 shared
  • Forest Isbell

    67 shared
  • David A. Wedin

    University of Nebraska–Lincoln

    55 shared
  • Johannes M. H. Knops

    Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University

    52 shared
  • Nico Eisenhauer

    German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research

    51 shared
  • Michael Clark

    University of Oxford

    36 shared
  • W. Stanley Harpole

    Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research

    32 shared
  • Eric W. Seabloom

    University of Minnesota

    31 shared

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