Instrumental observations of weather which have been made in the last three centuries confirm that climatic variations exist. These show no regularity with respect to either amplitude or frequency. To this date no successful estimation of climatic variation has been made on a scientific basis. For t
The effect of climatic variations on agricultural risk
โ Scribed by M. L. Parry; T. R. Carter
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 852 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0165-0009
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The thesis of this paper is that impacts from climatic change can be evaluated effectively as changes in the frequency of short-term, anomalous climatic events. These can then be expressed as changes in the level of risk of impact from climatic extremes. To evaluate this approach, the risk of crop failure resulting from low levels of accumulated temperature is assessed for oats farming in southern Scotland. Annual accumulated temperatures are calculated for the 32B-year-long temperature record compiled by ~fanley for Central England. These are bridged across to southern Scotland and, by calculating mean levels of risk for different elevations, an average 'risk surface' is constructed. 0ne-in-10 and 1-in-50 frequencies of crop failure are assumed to delineate a high-risk zone, which is mapped for the 323-year period by constructing isopleths of these risk levels. By redrawing the risk isopleths for warm and cool 50-year periods, the geographical shift of the high-risk zone is delineated. The conclusion is that relatively recent and apparently minor climatic variatmns in the United Kingdom have in fact induced substantial spatial changes in levels of agricultural risk. An advantage of expressing climatic change as a change in agricultural risk is that support programs for agriculture can be retuned to accommodate acceptable frequencies of impact by adjusting support levels to match new risk levels.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
tiaymaking and grazing in summer and ~4nter are fundamental to Icelandic agriculture. This paper shows that the growth of grass depends very much on the climate, particularly the temperature, and that winter temperatures are especially important. The climate of Iceland is highly variable, and the lo