scholarly journals Spatial and temporal rainfall variability and erosivity: Case of the Issen watershed, SW-Morocco

2020 ◽  
Vol 183 ◽  
pp. 02003
Author(s):  
Mohamed Ait Haddou ◽  
Belkacem Kabbachi ◽  
Ali Aydda ◽  
Hicham Gougni ◽  
Youssef Bouchriti

The Issen basin is a dry area affected by climate variability and desertification. It is located in high spot of Moroccan flora biodiversity that includes argan tree ecosystem as a part of the Western High Atlas (WHA). The objective of this work is to assess rainfall variability and erosivity as determining factors of soil erosion and vegetation cover degradation. The results reveal an arid to superior semi-arid climate where annual rainfall range from 200 mm in the centre of the Argana corridor, to 500 mm in the snow-covered northern foothills. The analysis of the 37 years of rainfall data indicate a coefficient of variation Cvis about67%. The erosivity index presents a high variability range from 34 to more than 81 MJ.mm/ha.h.yr in the wettest areas, indicating considerable soil erosion. In addition, the basin suffering from severe periods of drought due to the occurrence of the continuous decrease of the accumulated precipitation. Eventually, the rainfall variability and erosivity can affect ecosystem function and services (ecosystem degradation, water availability, etc).

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Schütt ◽  
Daniel Caviedes-Voullième ◽  
Christoph Hinz

<p><span>Vegetation self-organisation in water-limited ecosystems in semi-arid climates has been studied by means of numerical simulation using a set of reaction-diffusion-equations. The predominant approach in such studies, in particular relating to banded vegetation on slopes, has been to study the long-term steady ecohydrological tates on periodic domains forced by steady rainfall. This default modelling setup does not account for the fact that on a hillslope a net runoff loss may exist at the outlet. Moreover, such runoff loss is modulated by rainfall intensity, i.e., increasing rainfall intensity is likely to favour runoff over infiltration, and therefore affect the banded vegetation formation. Additionally, different inter-storm dry periods prompt different responses from the vegetation. One of the properties of semi-arid climates is a highly intermittent and variable precipitation regime, quite often with a few intense events and a larger number of very mild events. Additionally ecohydrological theory recognises that dryland ecosystems are in a quasi-permanent transient condition, exhibiting non-linear and far-from equilibrium responses to boundary conditions and forcings. The mismatch between the default modelling approach and the properties of rainfall in such systems calls for further complexity in the models and in the forcing.</span></p><p> </p><p><span>We explore the possible effects that particular rainfall properties can have in banded vegetation dynamics. We solve the well-known Rietkerk model together with a zero-inertia approximation of the shallow-water equations for surface flow. A non-periodic domain with an outlet, i.e., a 2D hillslope with a constant slope is used. We perform simulations forced by a set of variations of idealised temporal distributions of rainfall throughout a year. The reference distribution is a periodic signal of constant intensity storms of a single day, separated by dryspells of equal duration. The total annual rainfall was selected as 270 mm, in the range of semi-arid climates. This annual signal is repeated during the entire simulation. Non-periodic rainfall signals were generated by randomising a single rainfall property but ensuring the same annual rainfall. Randomisations of the inter-storm dryspell duration, the storm duration, and the storm intensity were explored. Although this results also in idealised rainfall signals, it allows for systematic analysis of each property. </span></p><p> </p><p><span>The banded patterns are assessed both in terms of global signatures (biomass, vegetation cover), spatial properties (number of bands, wavelength and bandwidth), and dynamics (migration velocity of the bands). Our results clearly show qualitatively and quantitatively that the simulated banded vegetation has a strong response to rainfall variability. Moreover, the results also show a high sensitivity to the particular succession of events, e.g., a succession of longer than average dryspells can throw the system away from equilibrium. High sensitivity is also observed to the timing of certain individual events. The system responds differently to events which happen early on in the development, or later, when the system is near equilibrium. The simulated response of the system are arguably too volatile, suggesting that improvements in the vegetation model parametrisation and formulation are warranted to better represent dynamics and allow for stability and resilience studies.</span></p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 680
Author(s):  
Milla Nobrega de Menezes Costa ◽  
Carmem Terezinha Becker ◽  
José Ivaldo Barbosa de Brito

O estado da Paraíba apresenta cerca de 76% do seu território abrangido pela região semiárida do Nordeste brasileiro, incluindo 170 dos 223 municípios, dentre estes, estão os municípios de Antenor Navarro atual São João do Rio do Peixe, Princesa Isabel, Catolé do Rocha e Soledade que se sobressaem como importantes polos agrícolas e econômicos do estado, e que frequentemente são afetados pela alta variabilidade climática. Neste trabalho, foi analisado para estes 4 municípios a distribuição pluviométrica num período de cem anos (de 1911 até o ano de 2010) verificando as variações e/ou tendências nas suas séries temporais e investigando se existe uma relação entre a Oscilação Decenal do Pacífico (ODP) com a pluviometria anual das 4 localidades. A partir dos resultados obtidos, verificou-se que São João do Rio do Peixe tem a maior média pluviométrica, porém a tendência de sua série temporal apresentando-se negativa, em contraposto aos outros municípios que apresentaram médias pluviométricas menores, porém com tendências positivas. A investigação da influência da ODP na precipitação anual normalizada das séries analisadas mostrou que uma parcela da ODP influência na variabilidade pluviométrica, porém depende da sua intensidade e de outros fatores tais como o dipolo do Atlântico Tropical e eventos de El Niño/La Niña, indicando que maiores investigações devem ser feitas. A B S T R A C T The state of Paraíba has about 76% of its territory covered by the semi-arid region of Northeast Brazil, including 170 of the 223 municipalities, among these are the municipalities of Antenor Navarro current São João do Rio do Peixe, Princesa Isabel, Soledade and Catolé that stand out as important agricultural and economic centers of the state, which are often affected by high climatic variability. This work was analyzed for these four counties rainfall distribution over one hundred years (1911 until 2010) verifying the changes and / or trends in their series and investigating whether there is a relationship between the Pacific Decadal Oscillation ( ODP) with annual rainfall of 4 locations. From the results obtained, it was found that St. John's River Fish has the highest average rainfall, but the tendency of his series showed up negative in opposed to other municipalities that had lower average rainfall, but with positive trends. The investigation of the influence of PDO on normalized annual rainfall series analyzed, showed that a portion of the ODP influence on rainfall variability, but depends on their strength and other factors such as the Tropical Atlantic dipole and El Niño / La Niña, indicating that further investigations should be made.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 95-101
Author(s):  
Roberto Avelino Cecílio ◽  
João Paulo Bestete de Oliveira ◽  
David Bruno de Sousa Teixeira ◽  
Fernando Falco Pruski ◽  
Sidney Sara Zanetti

Soil erosion is a serious agricultural and environmental problem considered as a threat to sustainable development around the world. Rainfall is the primary cause of soil erosion, what leads the knowledge of its potential to cause soil erosion (rainfall erosivity – R-factor) to be a valuable tool for the design of land conservation best practices. As Brazil has a lack of information about rainfall erosivity, the present paper has determined the R-factor of 141 pluviographic stations distributed over Brazilian territory. Initially, erosive rainfalls were identified, and then the EI30 erosivity index was used to obtain the rainfall erosivity values. Regression models for the estimation of rainfall erosivity using daily rainfall data were established based on the correlation between the monthly average values of erosivity and the modified Fournier index. Results showed that the annual rainfall erosivity in the Brazilian stations analyzed ranged from 368.7 to 16,850.6 MJ mm ha-1 h-1 year-1. The results presented help to expand information about the spatial distribution of rainfall erosivity in Brazil, contributing to better conservation planning of land use.


2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 1653-1662 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Chen ◽  
D. Naresh ◽  
L. Upmanu ◽  
Z. Hao ◽  
L. Dong ◽  
...  

Abstract. China is facing a water resources crisis with growing concerns as to the reliable supply of water for agricultural, industrial and domestic needs. High inter-annual rainfall variability and increasing consumptive use across the country exacerbates the situation further and is a constraint on future development. For water sustainability, it is necessary to examine the differences in water demand and supply and their spatio-temporal distribution in order to quantify the dimensions of the water risk. Here, a detailed quantitative assessment of water risk as measured by the spatial distribution of cumulated deficits for China is presented. Considering daily precipitation and temperature variability over fifty years and the current water demands, risk measures are developed to inform county level water deficits that account for both within-year and across-year variations in climate. We choose political rather than watershed boundaries since economic activity and water use are organized by county and the political process is best informed through that unit. As expected, the risk measures highlight North China Plain counties as highly water stressed. Regions with high water stress have high inter-annual variability in rainfall and now have depleted groundwater aquifers. The stress components due to agricultural, industrial and domestic water demands are illustrated separately to assess the vulnerability of particular sectors within the country to provide a basis for targeted policy analysis for reducing water stress.


2011 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fiona Walsh ◽  
Josie Douglas

Improvement in Aboriginal people’s livelihoods and economic opportunities has been a major aim of increased research and development on bush foods over the past decade. But worldwide the development of trade in non-timber forest products from natural populations has raised questions about the ecological sustainability of harvest. Trade-offs and tensions between commercialisation and cultural values have also been found. We investigated the sustainability of the small-scale commercial harvest and trade in native plant products sourced from central Australian rangelands (including Solanum centrale J.M. Black, Acacia Mill. spp.). We used semi-structured interviews with traders and Aboriginal harvesters, participant observation of trading and harvesting trips, and analysis of species and trader records. An expert Aboriginal reference group guided the project. We found no evidence of either taxa being vulnerable to over-harvest. S. centrale production is enhanced by harvesting when it co-occurs with patch-burning. Extreme fluctuations in productivity of both taxa, due to inter-annual rainfall variability, have a much greater impact on supply than harvest effects. Landscape-scale degradation (including cattle grazing and wildfire) affected ecological sustainability according to participants. By contrast, we found that sustainability of bush food trade is more strongly impacted by social and economic factors. The relationship-based links between harvesters and traders are critical to monetary trade. Harvesters and traders identified access to productive lands and narrow economic margins between costs and returns as issues for the future sustainability of harvest and trade. Harvesters and the reference group emphasised that sustaining bush harvest relies on future generations having necessary knowledge and skills; these are extremely vulnerable to loss. Aboriginal people derive multiple livelihood benefits from harvest and trade. Aboriginal custodians and harvester groups involved in recent trade are more likely to benefit from research and development investment to inter-generational knowledge and skill transfer than from investments in plant breeding and commercial horticultural development. In an inductive comparison, our study found there to be strong alignment between key findings about the strategies used by harvesters and traders in bush produce and the ‘desert system’..


Author(s):  
Hudson Ellen Alencar Menezes ◽  
Raimundo Mainar de Medeiros ◽  
José Lucas Guilherme Santos

<p>As variações nas precipitações refletem claramente a dinâmica atmosférica da região, marcada pela intensa variabilidade, onde se observa a atuação da Zona de Convergência Intertropical (ZCIT) com sua atuação entre os meses de janeiro a março, sendo esse período mais chuvoso. As variabilidades espaço temporal no comportamento das chuvas tem sido analisadas e diagnosticadas por vários autores no Nordeste do Brasil (NEB), portanto objetivou-se diagnosticar a variabilidade dos índices pluviométricos em Teresina no Estado do Piauí no período de 1913 a 2010. A análise do comportamento da precipitação nas cidades de grande e médio porte é de extrema importância para o gerenciamento dos recursos hídricos, uma vez que se trata de áreas densamente urbanizadas. Muitas vezes, sem uma estruturação urbana adequada, estas cidades se encaixam perfeitamente nesse contexto. Foram utilizados dados mensais observados e anuais de precipitação pluviométrica no período de 1913 a 2010, com 97 anos de observações. Os resultados mostraram a recorrência de valores máximos de precipitação anual dentro de um intervalo de 18, 11 e 8 anos. Na análise dos desvios-padrões, os resultados mostraram predominância dos desvios negativos em relação aos desvios positivos.</p><p align="center"><strong><em>Climatology of rainfall in the Teresina city, Piauí state, Brazil</em></strong></p><p>Variations in precipitation clearly reflect the atmospheric dynamics of the region, marked by intense variability, where we observe the performance of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) with his performance in the months of January-March, this being more rain tem period. The timeline of rainfall variability in behavior has been analyzed and diagnosed by several authors in Northeast Brazil (NEB), so let's study this variability between the periods 1913 to 2010 of Teresina city.  The behavior of rainfall in cities large and medium sized is of utmost importance to the managerial of water resources, since it is densely urbanized areas. Often without adequate urban structures these cities fit perfectly in this context. We used observed monthly and annual rainfall data for the period 1913-2010, 97 years of observations. The results showed recurrence of maximum values of annual precipitation an interval of 18, 11 and 8 years. In the analysis of standard deviations, the results showed a predominance of negative deviations from the positive deviations.<strong></strong></p><p align="center"><strong><em><br /></em></strong></p>


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document