Amazon river flow regime and flood recessional agriculture: Flood stage reversals and risk of annual crop loss

•Flow stage reversals along the upper Amazon river limit floodplain agriculture.•Reversals re-submerge newly seed crop and significantly shorten the growing season.•Farmers plant at lower bar elevations until the probably of re-submergence ≈50%.•Crop loss risk dissuades farmers from using fertile la...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam) 2016-08, Vol.539, p.214-222
Hauptverfasser: Coomes, Oliver T., Lapointe, Michel, Templeton, Michael, List, Geneva
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Flow stage reversals along the upper Amazon river limit floodplain agriculture.•Reversals re-submerge newly seed crop and significantly shorten the growing season.•Farmers plant at lower bar elevations until the probably of re-submergence ≈50%.•Crop loss risk dissuades farmers from using fertile lands lower in active channel. The annual flood cycle is an important driver of ecosystem structure and function in large tropical rivers such as the Amazon. Riparian peasant communities rely on river fishing and annual floodplain agriculture, closely adapted to the recession phase of the flood pulse. This article reports on a poorly documented but important challenge facing farmers practicing flood recessional agriculture along the Amazon river: frequent, unpredictable stage reversals (repiquetes) which threaten to ruin crops growing on channel bars. We assess the severity of stage reversals for rice production on exposed river mud bars (barreales) near Iquitos, Peru. Crop loss risk is estimated based on a quantitative analysis of 45years of daily Amazon stage data and field data from floodplain communities nearby in the Muyuy archipelago, upstream of Iquitos. Rice varieties selected, elevations of silt rich bars where rice is sown, as well as planting and harvest dates are analyzed in the light of the timing, frequencies and amplitudes of observed stage reversals that have the potential to destroy growing rice. We find that unpredictable stage reversals can produce substantial crop losses and shorten significantly the length of average growing seasons on lower elevation river bars. The data reveal that local famers extend planting down to lower bar elevations where the mean probabilities of re-submergence before rice maturity (due to reversals) approach 50%, below which they implicitly consider that the risk of crop loss outweighs the potential reward of planting.
ISSN:0022-1694
1879-2707
DOI:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2016.05.027