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Hydrological impacts of climate change on rice cultivated riparian wetlands in the Upper Meghna River Basin (Bangladesh and India)

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posted on 2019-10-07, 09:11 authored by Mohammed M. Rahman, Julian R. Thompson, Roger J. Flower

Riparian depressional wetlands (haors) in the Upper Meghna River Basin of Bangladesh are invaluable agricultural resources. They are completely flooded between June and November and planted with Boro rice when floodwater recedes in December. However, early harvest period (April/May) floods frequently damage ripening rice. A calibrated/validated Soil and Water Assessment Tool for riparian wetland (SWATrw) model is perturbed with bias free (using an improved quantile mapping approach) climate projections from 17 general circulation models (GCMs) for the period 2031–2050. Projected mean annual rainfall increases (200–500 mm or 7–10%). However, during the harvest period lower rainfall (21–75%) and higher evapotranspiration (1–8%) reduces river discharge (5–18%) and wetland inundation (inundation fraction declines of 0.005–0.14). Flooding risk for Boro rice consequently declines (rationalized flood risk reductions of 0.02–0.12). However, the loss of cultivable land (15.3%) to increases in permanent haor inundation represents a major threat to regional food security.

Funding

This paper is based on PhD research conducted by M.M. Rahman that was funded by the UCL Department of Geography Ted Hollis Scholarship in Wetland Hydrology and Conservation. The development and simulation of climate change scenarios was also supported by the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) project “Water climate services to inform food and water security in India” led by UCL (Principal investigator J.R. Thompson).

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