A pilot study for climate risk assessment in agriculture: a climate-based index for cherry trees

被引:2
|
作者
Tudela, Viviana [1 ]
Sarricolea, Pablo [2 ,3 ,6 ]
Serrano-Notivoli, Roberto [4 ]
Meseguer-Ruiz, Oliver [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ OHiggins, Inst Ciencias Agroalimentarias Anim & Ambientales, San Fernando, Chile
[2] Univ Chile, Dept Geog, Santiago, Chile
[3] Univ Chile, Programa Reducc Riesgos & Desastres, CITRID, Santiago, Chile
[4] Univ Autonoma Madrid, Dept Geog, Madrid, Spain
[5] Univ Tarapaca, Dept Ciencias Hist & Geog, Iquique, Chile
[6] Univ Chile, Ctr Climate & Resilience Res CR 2, Santiago, Chile
关键词
Extreme events; Frosts; Heat damage; Precipitation events; Risk index; Sweet cherry; FREE STATE PROVINCE; PRUNUS-AVIUM L; SWEET CHERRY; PSEUDOMONAS-SYRINGAE; FRUIT CRACKING; AGROCLIMATIC INDEXES; WHEAT PRODUCTION; MAIZE PRODUCTION; ENSO PREDICTION; RAIN;
D O I
10.1007/s11069-022-05549-8
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Cherry trees are one of Chile's most important specialty crop activities. Its commercial orchards have an extensive spatial distribution between the 31 degrees S and 48 degrees S, spreading from semiarid to tundra climates, but the trees appear primarily in the Mediterranean climate. Different extreme weather events, such as frosts, precipitation, and high temperatures, affect this crop at different phenological stages, especially in bloom, ripening, and floral differentiation. Based on a high-resolution climatic-gridded dataset of daily temperature and precipitation data, we defined an integrated risk index (RI) representing the frequency of occurrence of the events throughout the plant development period and considering each type of risk affecting each concrete phenological stage. High RI values indicate high climatic risk. The RI follows a meridional pattern influenced by elevation, with higher values in the highest elevations between 36 degrees S and 40 degrees S, sensitive to the simultaneous occurrence of frosts and precipitation events. The northern coast exhibited the lowest risk values, while a general gradient from low values in coastal areas to higher ones in inland elevated zones revealed an altitudinal pattern. Low-risk areas have a sparse distribution of crops, which can be explained by several factors restricting cherry cultivation such as soil limitations, high slopes, lack of productive support infrastructure, and competition with other profitable forestry and agricultural activities in the north and forest production in the south. These results will help to improve climate impact assessments for production systems, which can be conducted by following an easy-to-understand tool.
引用
收藏
页码:163 / 185
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A pilot study for climate risk assessment in agriculture: a climate-based index for cherry trees
    Viviana Tudela
    Pablo Sarricolea
    Roberto Serrano-Notivoli
    Oliver Meseguer-Ruiz
    Natural Hazards, 2023, 115 : 163 - 185
  • [2] Development of Climate-Based Index for Hydrologic Hazard Susceptibility
    Nashwan, Mohamed Salem
    Shahid, Shamsuddin
    Chung, Eun-Sung
    Ahmed, Kamal
    Song, Young Hoon
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2018, 10 (07)
  • [3] Climate-based archetypes for the environmental fate assessment of chemicals
    Ciuffo, Biagio
    Sala, Serenella
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2013, 129 : 435 - 443
  • [4] Climate-based risk models for Fasciola hepatica in Colombia
    Valencia-Lopez, Natalia
    Malone, John B.
    Carmona, Catalina Gomez
    Velasquez, Luz E.
    GEOSPATIAL HEALTH, 2012, 6 (03) : S75 - S85
  • [5] A CLIMATE-BASED INDEX OF HISTORIC SPAWNING-STREAM HYDROLOGY
    Kaeding, L. R.
    RIVER RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS, 2013, 29 (03) : 380 - 388
  • [6] Assessment of climate-based daylight performance in tropical office buildings: a case study
    Chien, Szu-cheng
    Tseng, King Jet
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LOW-CARBON TECHNOLOGIES, 2014, 9 (02) : 100 - 108
  • [7] Prevalence Maps and Climate-Based Risk Map of Toxocariasis in Iran
    Biderouni, Farid Tahvildar
    Tabaei, Seyyed Javad Seyyed
    Ghanimatdan, Mohamad
    Shahrokhi, Seyed Reza
    ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2019, 14 (04):
  • [8] Developing a climate-based risk map of fascioliasis outbreaks in Iran
    Halimi, Mansour
    Farajzadeh, Manuchehr
    Delavari, Mandi
    Arbabi, Mohsen
    JOURNAL OF INFECTION AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2015, 8 (05) : 481 - 486
  • [9] CLIMATE-BASED ZONATION WITH GIS FOR DRIED-FRUITS AND NUT TREES IN BEIJING
    Gao, Zhaoquan
    Fan, Jiangchuan
    Wang, Yantao
    Zhai, Zefeng
    Feng, Chen
    Peng, Xiang
    Li, Tianhong
    BANGLADESH JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2019, 48 (03): : 827 - 836
  • [10] A universal climate-based energy and thermal expectation index: Initial development and tests
    Emmanuel, R.
    Kumar, B.
    Roderick, Ya
    McEwan, D.
    ENERGY AND BUILDINGS, 2013, 58 : 208 - 218