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Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s National Agroclimate Information Service’s Drought Monitoring Trevor Hadwen Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Agri-Environmental.

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Presentation on theme: "Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s National Agroclimate Information Service’s Drought Monitoring Trevor Hadwen Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Agri-Environmental."— Presentation transcript:

1 Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s National Agroclimate Information Service’s Drought Monitoring Trevor Hadwen Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Agri-Environmental Services Branch (AESB) National Agroclimate Information Service (NAIS) Global Drought Assessment Workshop Asheville, NC, April 22, 2010

2 2 Depending on: –A regions normal climate –Specific needs of various sectors Main categories of drought are: –meteorological –agricultural –hydrological –socioeconomic Drought can mean many different things to different people The availability of water depends largely on rainfall, (but) the concept of drought cannot be divorced from the use to which water is put. Gibbs & Maher (1967): Most drought indices we use measure meteorological drought Drought – more than just lack of rainfall

3 3 Drought Watch Website www.agr.gc.ca/drought Goals: To provide timely information of the impacts of climatic variability on water supply and agriculture in Canada. To promote practices that reduce drought vulnerability and improve management during a drought. The site includes Current Condition and Historical Maps Climate Profiles Drought Management Information Federal Programs Provincial Links Related Websites Farm Stress Information Products include: Seasonal and annual Products for Moisture indicators Rolling Percent of Average Precipitation - 7-day out to 5 years Rolling Accumulated - 7-day out to 5 years Dry Spell indicator - 7, 14, 30, 60… days with < 0.5 mm - Consecutive days with < 0.5 mm Departure from Normal Precipitation (Rolling) - Set time periods (7-day out to 5 years) - Seasonal Temperature - Max/Min temperature over 7-days - Heat waves / Dry spells Growing Degree Days (Base 0, 5, 10, and 15) Corn Heat Units Over 500 maps produced daily

4 4 National and Regional Products Canada is broken down into 5 regions

5 5 Time Specific Products Deciles Percent of normal Accumulated PPT Departure from average Agricultural year Growing season Winter season

6 6 National Drought Model: SPI Calculated Monthly

7 7 National Drought Model: Palmer Drought Severity Index

8 8 National Drought Model: Soil Moisture The Drought model uses a simplified water balance approach (modified VSMB)

9 9 NDVI Imagery

10 10 MODIS - Remote Sensing Products: Weekly MODIS NDVI 7-day composites Advantages of the MODIS System National Coverage Better resolution Better analytical features Data is free of charge from USGS Data back-up system is incorporated Opportunity to use other Indices

11 11 SSMI – Special Sensor Microwave Imager

12 12 Prairie Drought Impact Monitoring On-Farm Surface Water Supply and Forage Monitoring Program Forage Production Forage Supplies On-Farm Surface Water Supplies

13 13 Online Data Entry From Known Users

14 14 Quantifying the Impacts of Drought

15 15 Quantifying the Impacts of Drought

16 16 Tax Deferral for Drought Induced Livestock Sales

17 17 Monitoring Outside the Agricultural Extent Lack of station data for northern regions. Lack of understanding of drought assessment and drought issues in northern areas, especially north of the treeline. Research is required on how to address these issues. First priority is to improve monitoring in the boreal regions. We need to develop relative indicators for northern regions. CFS currently uses Absolute indicators. Remove sensing may be able to assist in some regions.

18 18 International Collaboration and Drought Analysis A consolidation of indices and indicators into one comprehensive national/continental drought map Captures the drought’s magnitude (duration + intensity), spatial extent and impacts

19 Thank You Trevor Hadwen trevor.hadwen@agr.gc.ca

20 20 Active Hydrometric Stations

21 21 Challenges for Drought Monitoring in Canada Canadian environment is complex and drought indices need to be utilized in a way that reflects this. Increased need for timeliness and accuracy in determining extent location and severity of climate impacts. Quality and quantity of data is incomplete. Data density and length of record are both significant challenges. Uncertainties exist in index calculation, mapping and interpretation. Testing and calibration should be encouraged Winter (Snow) – Hard to measure, it tends to move around before the moisture is accessible (Blowing, runoff, sublimation). Indices do not account for this.


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