Flexible strategies for coping with rainfall variability : seasonal adjustments in cropped area in the Ganges basin

DOI

One of the main manifestations of climate change is expected to be increased rainfall variability. How to deal with this in agriculture will be a major societal challenge. In this paper we explore flexibility in land use, through deliberate seasonal adjustments in cropped area, as a specific strategy for coping with rainfall variability. Such adjustments are not incorporated in hydro-meteorological crop models commonly used for food security analyses. Our paper contributes to the literature by making a comprehensive model assessment of inter-annual variability in cropproduction, including both variations in crop yield and cropped area. The Ganges basin is used as a case study.First, we assessed the contribution of cropped area variability to overall variability in rice and wheat production by applying hierarchical partitioning on time-series of agricultural statistics. We then introduced cropped area as an endogenous decision variable in a hydro-economic optimization model (WaterWise), coupled to a hydrology-vegetation model (LPJmL), and analyzed to what extent its performance in the estimation of inter-annual variability in crop production improved.From the statistics, we found that in the period 1999-2009 seasonal adjustment in cropped area can explain almost 50% of variability in wheat production and 40% of variability in rice production in the Indian part of the Ganges basin. Our improved model was well capable of mimicking existing variability at different spatial aggregation levels, especially for wheat. The value of flexibility, i.e. the foregone costs of choosing not to crop in years when water is scarce, was quantified at 4% of gross margin of wheat in the Indian part of the Ganges basin and as high as 34% of gross margin of wheat in the drought-prone state of Rajasthan. We argue that flexibility in land use is an important coping strategy to rainfall variability in water stressed regions.

Date Submitted: 2015-12-22

Files not yet migrated to Data Station. Files for this dataset can be found at https://easy.dans.knaw.nl/ui/datasets/id/easy-dataset:63081.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.17026/dans-xea-j4wd
Metadata Access https://phys-techsciences.datastations.nl/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.17026/dans-xea-j4wd
Provenance
Creator C. Siderius; H. Biemans; P.E.V. van Walsum; E.C. van Ierland; P. Kabat; P.J.G.J. Hellegers
Publisher DANS Data Station Physical and Technical Sciences
Contributor Data Librarian; Wageningen UR (WUR)
Publication Year 2016
Rights CC0 1.0; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess; http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0
OpenAccess true
Contact Data Librarian (Wageningen UR)
Representation
Resource Type Dataset
Format application/zip
Size 19261
Version 1.0
Discipline Earth and Environmental Science; Environmental Research; Geosciences; Natural Sciences