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Rainfall-derived growing season characteristics for agricultural impact assessments in South Africa
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 01:59 authored by Chiara Ambrosino, Richard E Chandler, Martin ToddMartin ToddPrecipitation variability imposes significant pressure in areas where agricultural practice is dominated by smallholder farmers who are dependent on subsistence farming. Advances in the understanding of this variability, in both time and space, have an important role to play in increasing the resilience of agricultural systems. The need is particularly pressing in regions of the world such as the African continent, which is already affected by multiple stresses including poverty and economic and political instability. In this paper, we explore the use of generalised linear models (GLMs) for this purpose, via a case study from north-east South Africa. A GLM is used to link the local rainfall variability to large-scale climate drivers identified from previous subcontinental-scale analyses, and the ability of the resulting model to simulate precipitation features that are relevant in agricultural applications is evaluated. We focus in particular on a set of growing season indices, proposed for the investigation of intraseasonal characteristics relevant for maize production in the region. Seven indices were computed from spatially averaged daily rainfall series from nine stations in the study area. As a first attempt to use GLMs for this type of application, the results are encouraging and suggest that the models are able to reproduce a range of agriculture-relevant indices. However, further research into spatial correlation structure is recommended to improve the multisite generation of the rainfall-derived characteristics.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Theoretical and Applied ClimatologyISSN
0177-798XPublisher
Springer VerlagExternal DOI
Issue
3Volume
115Page range
411-426Department affiliated with
- Geography Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes