Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa

Understanding the potential impacts of climate variability/change on soil moisture is essential for the development of informed adaptation strategies. However, long-term in-situ soil moisture measurements are sparse in most countries. The objectives of this study were to develop and analyse the temp...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Myeni, L., Moeletsi, M.E., Clulow, A.D.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116896
_version_ 1855533149946118144
author Myeni, L.
Moeletsi, M.E.
Clulow, A.D.
author_browse Clulow, A.D.
Moeletsi, M.E.
Myeni, L.
author_facet Myeni, L.
Moeletsi, M.E.
Clulow, A.D.
author_sort Myeni, L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Understanding the potential impacts of climate variability/change on soil moisture is essential for the development of informed adaptation strategies. However, long-term in-situ soil moisture measurements are sparse in most countries. The objectives of this study were to develop and analyse the temporal variability of a long-term soil moisture data set in South Africa. In this study, a water balance model was used to reconstruct long-term soil moisture data sets from 1980 through 2018, in three sites that represent the diverse agroclimatic conditions of South Africa. Additionally, long-term changes and variability of soil moisture were examined to investigate the potential impacts of climate variability on soil moisture. The results of the Mann–Kendall test showed a non-significant decreasing trend of soil moisture for inland stations at a rate between -0.001 and -0.02 mm per annum. In contrast, a statistically significant (at 5% level of significance) increasing trend of soil moisture for a coastal station at a rate of 0.1131 mm per annum was observed. The findings suggest that the Bainsvlei and Bronkhorstspruit stations located in the inland region are gradually becoming drier as a result of decreasing rainfall and increasing air temperature. In contrast, the Mandeni station located in the coastal region is becoming wetter as a result of increasing rainfall, despite the increase in air temperature. The findings indicate that climate variability is likely to change the soil moisture content, although the influence will vary with region and climatic conditions. Therefore, understanding the factors that affect soil moisture variability at the local scale is critical for the development of informed and effective adaptation strategies.Significance: Long-term modelled estimates were used to investigate the potential impacts of climate variability on soil moisture in three different agroclimatic conditions of South Africa. Results show that inland regions are gradually becoming drier as a result of decreasing trends of rainfall and increasing air temperatures while coastal regions are becoming wetter as a result of increasing trends of rainfall. This study indicates that climate variability is likely to change soil moisture, although various regions will be affected differently. The development of informed adaptation strategies at the local scale is critical to cope effectively with climate variability.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace116896
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
publisherStr Academy of Science of South Africa
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1168962026-01-22T09:19:35Z Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa Myeni, L. Moeletsi, M.E. Clulow, A.D. water balance modelling soil data soil water content Understanding the potential impacts of climate variability/change on soil moisture is essential for the development of informed adaptation strategies. However, long-term in-situ soil moisture measurements are sparse in most countries. The objectives of this study were to develop and analyse the temporal variability of a long-term soil moisture data set in South Africa. In this study, a water balance model was used to reconstruct long-term soil moisture data sets from 1980 through 2018, in three sites that represent the diverse agroclimatic conditions of South Africa. Additionally, long-term changes and variability of soil moisture were examined to investigate the potential impacts of climate variability on soil moisture. The results of the Mann–Kendall test showed a non-significant decreasing trend of soil moisture for inland stations at a rate between -0.001 and -0.02 mm per annum. In contrast, a statistically significant (at 5% level of significance) increasing trend of soil moisture for a coastal station at a rate of 0.1131 mm per annum was observed. The findings suggest that the Bainsvlei and Bronkhorstspruit stations located in the inland region are gradually becoming drier as a result of decreasing rainfall and increasing air temperature. In contrast, the Mandeni station located in the coastal region is becoming wetter as a result of increasing rainfall, despite the increase in air temperature. The findings indicate that climate variability is likely to change the soil moisture content, although the influence will vary with region and climatic conditions. Therefore, understanding the factors that affect soil moisture variability at the local scale is critical for the development of informed and effective adaptation strategies.Significance: Long-term modelled estimates were used to investigate the potential impacts of climate variability on soil moisture in three different agroclimatic conditions of South Africa. Results show that inland regions are gradually becoming drier as a result of decreasing trends of rainfall and increasing air temperatures while coastal regions are becoming wetter as a result of increasing trends of rainfall. This study indicates that climate variability is likely to change soil moisture, although various regions will be affected differently. The development of informed adaptation strategies at the local scale is critical to cope effectively with climate variability. 2021-05-28 2021-12-20T13:44:35Z 2021-12-20T13:44:35Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116896 en Open Access application/pdf Academy of Science of South Africa Myeni, L., Moeletsi, M.E. and Clulow, A.D. 2021. Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa. South African Journal of Science 117(5/6)
spellingShingle water balance
modelling
soil
data
soil water content
Myeni, L.
Moeletsi, M.E.
Clulow, A.D.
Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa
title Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa
title_full Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa
title_fullStr Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa
title_short Development and analysis of a long-term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of South Africa
title_sort development and analysis of a long term soil moisture data set in three different agroclimatic zones of south africa
topic water balance
modelling
soil
data
soil water content
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116896
work_keys_str_mv AT myenil developmentandanalysisofalongtermsoilmoisturedatasetinthreedifferentagroclimaticzonesofsouthafrica
AT moeletsime developmentandanalysisofalongtermsoilmoisturedatasetinthreedifferentagroclimaticzonesofsouthafrica
AT clulowad developmentandanalysisofalongtermsoilmoisturedatasetinthreedifferentagroclimaticzonesofsouthafrica