Indicator-to-impact links to help improve agricultural drought preparedness in Thailand

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Author listMaliko Tanguy, Michael Eastman, Eugene Magee, Lucy J. Barker, Thomas Chitson, Chaiwat Ekkawatpanit, Daniel Goodwin, Jamie Hannaford, Ian Holman, Liwa Pardthaisong, Simon Parry, Dolores Rey Vicario, and Supattra Visessri

PublisherEuropean Geosciences Union

Publication year2023

Journal acronymNHESS

Volume number23

Issue number7

Start page2419

End page2441

Number of pages23

ISSN1561-8633

eISSN1684-9981

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85171338942&doi=10.5194%2fnhess-23-2419-2023&partnerID=40&md5=6bfa583fc28a6ffdc680e93d4be3307f

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Abstract

Droughts in Thailand are becoming more severe due to climate change. Developing a reliable drought monitoring and early warning system (DMEWS) is essential to strengthen a country's resilience to droughts. However, for a DMEWS to be valuable, the drought indicators provided to stakeholders must have relevance to tangible impacts on the ground. Here, we analyse drought indicator-to-impact relationships in Thailand, using a combination of correlation analysis and machine learning techniques (random forest). In the correlation analysis, we study the link between meteorological drought indicators and high-resolution remote sensing vegetation indices used as proxies for crop yield and forest growth impacts. Our analysis shows that this link varies depending on land use, season and region. The random forest models built to estimate regional crop productivity allow a more in-depth analysis of the crop- and region-specific importance of different drought indicators. The results highlight seasonal patterns of drought vulnerability for individual crops, usually linked to their growing season, although the effects are somewhat attenuated in irrigated regions. Integration of the approaches provides new, detailed knowledge of crop- and region-specific indicator-to-impact links, which can form the basis of targeted mitigation actions in an improved DMEWS in Thailand and could be applied to other parts of Southeast Asia and beyond. ฉ Copyright:


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Last updated on 2024-28-02 at 23:05