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Original Articles

Developing an operational rangeland water requirement satisfaction index

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Pages 6047-6053 | Received 18 Feb 2009, Accepted 16 Sep 2009, Published online: 11 Aug 2011
 

Abstract

Developing an operational water requirement satisfaction index (WRSI) for rangeland monitoring is an important goal of the famine early warning systems network. An operational WRSI has been developed for crop monitoring, but until recently a comparable WRSI for rangeland was not successful because of the extremely poor performance of the index when based on published crop coefficients (K c) for rangelands. To improve the rangeland WRSI, we developed a simple calibration technique that adjusts the K c values for rangeland monitoring using long-term rainfall distribution and reference evapotranspiration data. The premise for adjusting the K c values is based on the assumption that a viable rangeland should exhibit above-average WRSI (values >80%) during a normal year. The normal year was represented by a median dekadal rainfall distribution (satellite rainfall estimate from 1996 to 2006). Similarly, a long-term average for potential evapotranspiration was used as input to the famine early warning systems network WRSI model in combination with soil-water-holding capacity data. A dekadal rangeland WRSI has been operational for east and west Africa since 2005. User feedback has been encouraging, especially with regard to the end-of-season WRSI anomaly products that compare the index's performance to ‘normal’ years. Currently, rangeland WRSI products are generated on a dekadal basis and posted for free distribution on the US Geological Survey early warning website at http://earlywarning.usgs.gov/adds/

Notes

*This paper came from a workshop entitled ‘Potentialities and Limitations in the Use of Remote Sensing for Detecting and Monitoring Environmental Change in the Horn of Africa’. The workshop was organized by Somalia Water and Land Information Management (SWALIM) between 13 and 14 June 2007 at the Holiday Inn in Nairobi, Kenya. SWALIM is a project of the UN-FAO in Somalia (www.faoswalim.org).

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