drought classes
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Complexity ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Rizwan Niaz ◽  
Mohammed M. A. Almazah ◽  
Xiang Zhang ◽  
Ijaz Hussain ◽  
Muhammad Faisal

Drought frequently spreads across large spatial and time scales and is more complicated than other natural disasters that can damage economic and other natural resources worldwide. However, improved drought monitoring and forecasting techniques can help to minimize the vulnerability of society to drought and its consequent influences. This emphasizes the need for improved drought monitoring tools and assessment techniques that provide information more precisely about drought occurrences. Therefore, this study developed a new method, Model-Based Clustering for Spatio-Temporal Categorical Sequences (MBCSTCS), that uses state selection procedures through finite mixture modeling and model-based clustering. The MBCSTCS uses the functional structure of first-order Markov model components for modeling each data group. In MBCSTCS, the suitable order K of the components is selected by Bayesian information criterion (BIC). In MBCSTCS, the estimated mixing proportions and the posterior probabilities are used to compute probability distribution associated with the future steps of transitions. Furthermore, MBCSTCS predicts drought occurrences in future time using spatiotemporal categorical sequences of various drought classes. The MBCSTCS is applied to the six meteorological stations in the northern area of Pakistan. Moreover, it is found that MBCSTCS provides expeditious information for the long-term spatiotemporal categorical sequences. These findings may be helpful to make plans for early warning systems, water resource management, and drought mitigation policies to decrease the severe effects of drought.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peyman Mahmoudi ◽  
Allahbakhsh Rigi

Abstract The main objective of this study was to predict the transition probability of different drought classes by applying Homogenous and non- Homogenous Markov chain models. The daily precipitation data of 40 synoptic stations in Iran, for a period of 35 years (1983–2018), was used to access the study objectives. The Effective Drought Index (EDI) was applied to categorize Iran’s droughts. With the implementation of cluster analysis on the daily values of effective drought index (EDI), it was observed that Iran can be divided into five separate regions based on the behavior of the time series of the studied stations. The spatial mean of the effective drought index (EDI) of each region was also calculated. After forming the transition frequency matrix, the dependent and correlated test of data was conducted via chi-square test. The results of this test confirmed the assumption that the various drought classes are correlated in five studied regions. Eventually, after adjusting the transition probability matrix for the studied regions, the homogenous and non-homogenous Markov chains were modeled and Markov characteristics of droughts were extracted including various class probabilities of drought severity, the average expected residence time in each drought class, the expected first passage time from various classes of droughts to the wet classes, and the short-term prediction of various drought classes. Regarding these climate areas, the results showed that the probability of each category is reduced as the severity of drought increases from poor drought category to severe and very severe drought. In the non-homogeneous Markov chain, the probability of each category of drought for winter, spring, and fall indicated that the probability of weak drought category is more than other categories. Since the obtained anticipating results are dependent on the early months, they were more accurate than those of the homogeneous Markov chain. In general, both Markov chains showed favorable results that can be very useful for water resource planners.


Atmosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 1000
Author(s):  
Muhammad Nouman Sattar ◽  
Muhammad Jehanzaib ◽  
Ji Eun Kim ◽  
Hyun-Han Kwon ◽  
Tae-Woong Kim

Drought is one of the most destructive natural hazards and results in negative effects on the environment, agriculture, economics, and society. A meteorological drought originates from atmospheric components, while a hydrological drought is influenced by properties of the hydrological cycle and generally induced by a continuous meteorological drought. Several studies have attempted to explain the cross dependencies between meteorological and hydrological droughts. However, these previous studies did not consider the propagation of drought classes. Therefore, in this study, to consider the drought propagation concept and to probabilistically assess the meteorological and hydrological drought classes, characterized by the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) and Standardized Runoff Index (SRI), respectively, we employed the Markov Bayesian Classifier (MBC) model that combines the procedure of iteration of feature extraction, classification, and application for assessment of drought classes for both SPI and SRI. The classification results were compared using the observed SPI and SRI, as well as with previous findings, which demonstrated that the MBC was able to reasonably determine drought classes. The accuracy of the MBC model in predicting all the classes of meteorological drought varies from 36 to 76% and in predicting all the classes of hydrological drought varies from 33 to 70%. The advantage of the MBC-based classification is that it considers drought propagation, which is very useful for planning, monitoring, and mitigation of hydrological drought in areas having problems related to hydrological data availability.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 4254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhirup Dikshit ◽  
Biswajeet Pradhan ◽  
Abdullah M. Alamri

Droughts can cause significant damage to agriculture and water resources, leading to severe economic losses and loss of life. One of the most important aspect is to develop effective tools to forecast drought events that could be helpful in mitigation strategies. The understanding of droughts has become more challenging because of the effect of climate change, urbanization and water management; therefore, the present study aims to forecast droughts by determining an appropriate index and analyzing its changes, using climate variables. The work was conducted in three different phases, first being the determination of Standard Precipitation Evaporation Index (SPEI), using global climatic dataset of Climate Research Unit (CRU) from 1901–2018. The indices are calculated at different monthly intervals which could depict short-term or long-term changes, and the index value represents different drought classes, ranging from extremely dry to extremely wet. However, the present study was focused only on forecasting at short-term scales for New South Wales (NSW) region of Australia and was conducted at two different time scales, one month and three months. The second phase involved dividing the data into three sample sizes, training (1901–2010), testing (2011–2015) and validation (2016–2018). Finally, a machine learning approach, Random Forest (RF), was used to train and test the data, using various climatic variables, e.g., rainfall, potential evapotranspiration, cloud cover, vapor pressure and temperature (maximum, minimum and mean). The final phase was to analyze the performance of the model based on statistical metrics and drought classes. Regarding this, the performance of the testing period was conducted by using statistical metrics, Coefficient of Determination (R2) and Root-Mean-Square-Error (RMSE) method. The performance of the model showed a considerably higher value of R2 for both the time scales. However, statistical metrics analyzes the variation between the predicted and observed index values, and it does not consider the drought classes. Therefore, the variation in predicted and observed SPEI values were analyzed based on different drought classes, which were validated by using the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC)-based Area under the Curve (AUC) approach. The results reveal that the classification of drought classes during the validation period had an AUC of 0.82 for SPEI 1 case and 0.84 for SPEI 3 case. The study depicts that the Random Forest model can perform both regression and classification analysis for drought studies in NSW. The work also suggests that the performance of any model for drought forecasting should not be limited only through statistical metrics, but also by examining the variation in terms of drought characteristics.


Author(s):  
A. H. Ngandam Mfondoum ◽  
P. G. Gbetkom ◽  
R. Cooper ◽  
S. Hakdaoui ◽  
M. B. Mansour Badamassi

Abstract. Drought affects all human activities and ecosystems. Nearly 40 percent of the world’s population inhabit Drylands, and they depend on agriculture for their food, security and livelihoods. Among the remote sensing indices developed, the Land Surface General Drought Index (LSGDI) was recently proposed. This paper proposes an improved model of LSGDI to face the issue of drought in semi-arid and arid regions. The experiment was conducted for the Maga’s floodplain, in North-Cameroon. The method uses satellite images of Landsat in 1987, 2003 and 2018, for January and March or April, corresponding to the middle and the end of the dry season. A Vegetation Moisture Index (VMI) and a Normalized Difference Soil Drought Index (NDSoDI) are both developed. On an orthogonal plan, their projections give a drought line that expresses the improved LSGDI (LSGDI2) as the root sum square of the NDSoDI and the VMI. The LSGDI2 results are ranged in [0.09 – 0.14] interval, which is used to define the threshold and ease the qualifiers for drought classes. The visual patterns easily match the sandy areas of the original Landsat images with the highest values, while the vegetation and water areas match the lowest values. Compared with the LSGDI and Second Modified Perpendicular drought Index (MPDI1), the new index reflectance values are higher. Finally, although LSGDI2 curve’s evolution follows the NDSoDI one at 94%, the new spectral index values depends on the both components, helping to map highest values of drought and moisture in Maga’s floodplain, for a sustainable rice culture expansion.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 633-654 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Mehdi Moghimi ◽  
Abdol Rassoul Zarei ◽  
Mohammad Reza Mahmoudi

Abstract Confronting drought and reducing its impacts requires modeling and forecasting of this phenomenon. In this research, the ability of different time series models (the ARIMA models with different structures) were evaluated to model and predict seasonal drought based on the RDI drought index in the south of Iran. For this purpose, the climatic data of 16 synoptic stations from 1980 to 2010 were used. Evaluation of time series models was based on trial and error. Results showed drought classes varied between ‘very wet’ to ‘severely dry’. The more occurrence frequency of ‘severely dry’ class compared to other drought classes represent the necessity of drought assessment and the importance of managing the effects of this phenomenon in the study area. Results showed that the highest severity of drought occurred at Abadeh, Shiraz, Fasa, Sirjan, Kerman, Shahre Babak and Saravan stations. According to selecting the best model fitted to the computed three-month RDI time series, results indicated that the MA model based on the Innovations method resulted in maximum cases with the best performance (37.5% of cases). The AR model based on the Yule–Walker method resulted in minimum cases with the best performance (6.3% of cases) in seasonal drought forecasting.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zulfiqar Ali ◽  
Ijaz Hussain ◽  
Muhammad Faisal ◽  
Ibrahim M. Almanjahie ◽  
Muhammad Ismail ◽  
...  

Drought is a complex stochastic natural hazard caused by prolonged shortage of rainfall. Several environmental factors are involved in determining drought classes at the specific monitoring station. Therefore, efficient sequence processing techniques are required to explore and predict the periodic information about the various episodes of drought classes. In this study, we proposed a new weighting scheme to predict the probability of various drought classes under Weighted Markov Chain (WMC) model. We provide a standardized scheme of weights for ordinal sequences of drought classifications by normalizing squared weighted Cohen Kappa. Illustrations of the proposed scheme are given by including temporal ordinal data on drought classes determined by the standardized precipitation temperature index (SPTI). Experimental results show that the proposed weighting scheme for WMC model is sufficiently flexible to address actual changes in drought classifications by restructuring the transient behavior of a Markov chain. In summary, this paper proposes a new weighting scheme to improve the accuracy of the WMC, specifically in the field of hydrology.


2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (7) ◽  
pp. 1943-1962 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Lorenz ◽  
Jason A. Otkin ◽  
Mark Svoboda ◽  
Christopher R. Hain ◽  
Martha C. Anderson ◽  
...  

Abstract The U.S. Drought Monitor (USDM) classifies drought into five discrete dryness/drought categories based on expert synthesis of numerous data sources. In this study, an empirical methodology is presented for creating a nondiscrete USDM index that simultaneously 1) represents the dryness/wetness value on a continuum and 2) is most consistent with the time scales and processes of the actual USDM. A continuous USDM representation will facilitate USDM forecasting methods, which will benefit from knowledge of where, within a discrete drought class, the current drought state most probably lies. The continuous USDM is developed such that the actual discrete USDM can be reconstructed by discretizing the continuous USDM based on the 30th, 20th, 10th, 5th, and 2nd percentiles—corresponding with USDM definitions for the D4–D0 drought classes. Anomalies in precipitation, soil moisture, and evapotranspiration over a range of different time scales are used as predictors to estimate the continuous USDM. The methodology is fundamentally probabilistic, meaning that the probability density function (PDF) of the continuous USDM is estimated and therefore the degree of uncertainty in the fit is properly characterized. Goodness-of-fit metrics and direct comparisons between the actual and predicted USDM analyses during different seasons and years indicate that this objective drought classification method is well correlated with the current USDM analyses. In Part II, this continuous USDM index will be used to improve intraseasonal USDM intensification forecasts because it is capable of distinguishing between USDM states that are either far from or near to the next-higher drought category.


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