Assessing long-term rainfall trends and changes in a tropical watershed Brantas, Indonesia: an approach for quantifying the agreement among satellite-based rainfall data, ground rainfall data, and small-scale farmers questionnaires

The agreement between meteorological data and societal perception is essential in supporting a robust policy making and its implementation. In humid tropic watersheds like Brantas, such consensus is important for water resources management and policies. This study exemplifies an effort to understand...

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Veröffentlicht in:Natural hazards (Dordrecht) 2023-07, Vol.117 (3), p.2835-2862
Hauptverfasser: Wiwoho, Bagus Setiabudi, Astuti, Ike Sari, Purwanto, Purwanto, Deffinika, Ifan, Alfarizi, Imam Abdul Gani, Sucahyo, Hetty Rahmawati, Gusti, Randhiki, Herwanto, Mochammad Tri, Herlambang, Gilang Aulia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The agreement between meteorological data and societal perception is essential in supporting a robust policy making and its implementation. In humid tropic watersheds like Brantas, such consensus is important for water resources management and policies. This study exemplifies an effort to understand the long-term rainfall characteristics within the watershed and to build a common link among the differing data sources: CHIRPS rainfall satellite data, rain gauge data, and farmers perceptions. Six rainfall characteristics were derived using statistical measures from the scientific data and then were translated to a series of structured questionnaires given to small-scale farmers. A consensus matrix was built to examine the level of agreement among three data sources, supporting the spatial pattern of the meteorological data and farmers perception. Two rainfall attributes were classified with high agreement, four with moderate and one with low agreement. The agreements and discrepancies of rainfall characteristics were found in the study area. The discrepancies originated from the accuracy in translating scientific measurements to practical meanings for farmers, complexity of the farming system, the nature of phenomena in questions, and farmers’ ability to record long-term climatic events. This study shows an implication that a combined approach to link scientific data and societal data is needed to support powerful climate policy making.
ISSN:0921-030X
1573-0840
DOI:10.1007/s11069-023-05969-0