Impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh

The coastal regions of Bangladesh are highly vulnerable to climate change. Crop intensification and diversification in these areas are lower than in other parts of the country due to multiple environmental stresses, particularly higher rainfall variability and extremes with other stresses. The curre...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Islam, H. M. Touhidul, Ahmed, Sharif, Kamruzzaman, Mohammad, Kumar, Virender, Bhandari, Humnath
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177625
_version_ 1855523199468437504
author Islam, H. M. Touhidul
Ahmed, Sharif
Kamruzzaman, Mohammad
Kumar, Virender
Bhandari, Humnath
author_browse Ahmed, Sharif
Bhandari, Humnath
Islam, H. M. Touhidul
Kamruzzaman, Mohammad
Kumar, Virender
author_facet Islam, H. M. Touhidul
Ahmed, Sharif
Kamruzzaman, Mohammad
Kumar, Virender
Bhandari, Humnath
author_sort Islam, H. M. Touhidul
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The coastal regions of Bangladesh are highly vulnerable to climate change. Crop intensification and diversification in these areas are lower than in other parts of the country due to multiple environmental stresses, particularly higher rainfall variability and extremes with other stresses. The current study investigates the impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh. Based on the historical climate data (1980-2020), this study examines the onset (ON) and withdrawal (WD) of monsoon precipitation by forward and backward accumulation techniques and the probability of dry and wet spells utilizing the Markov Chain (MC) probability model. The average ON and WD of monsoon precipitation were found at the 21st-22nd and 43rd-44th standard meteorological weeks (SMWs), respectively, for all the stations. Extreme rainfall events have increased in recent periods (2001-2020) compared to earlier periods (1981-2000) in the rainfall months (Jun-Oct), potentially contributing to the recurrent flash floods and waterlogging. The probabilities of dry spells were more frequent in early (1st-17th SMWs) and late (43rd-52nd SMWs) periods, while wet weeks (18th-42nd SMWs) had a 40-100 % chance of precipitation. We also analyzed the effect of rainfall variability on aus (pre-monsoon rice) production, which has great potential in this area. Additionally, we assessed the frequency and return periods of extreme rainfall events during the dry months (Nov-Apr) to evaluate the risks and opportunities for rabi/non-rice crop cultivation. We found that higher return periods of extreme events might delay the sowing of rabi crops and have adverse effects, particularly during their maturity phases. This study emphasizes the optimized sowing windows and climate-resilient cropping systems to support sustainable crop intensification and diversification in coastal Bangladesh.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace177625
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1776252025-11-12T04:57:02Z Impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh Islam, H. M. Touhidul Ahmed, Sharif Kamruzzaman, Mohammad Kumar, Virender Bhandari, Humnath climate change salinity food security rainfall patterns agricultural productivity cropping systems coastal areas The coastal regions of Bangladesh are highly vulnerable to climate change. Crop intensification and diversification in these areas are lower than in other parts of the country due to multiple environmental stresses, particularly higher rainfall variability and extremes with other stresses. The current study investigates the impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh. Based on the historical climate data (1980-2020), this study examines the onset (ON) and withdrawal (WD) of monsoon precipitation by forward and backward accumulation techniques and the probability of dry and wet spells utilizing the Markov Chain (MC) probability model. The average ON and WD of monsoon precipitation were found at the 21st-22nd and 43rd-44th standard meteorological weeks (SMWs), respectively, for all the stations. Extreme rainfall events have increased in recent periods (2001-2020) compared to earlier periods (1981-2000) in the rainfall months (Jun-Oct), potentially contributing to the recurrent flash floods and waterlogging. The probabilities of dry spells were more frequent in early (1st-17th SMWs) and late (43rd-52nd SMWs) periods, while wet weeks (18th-42nd SMWs) had a 40-100 % chance of precipitation. We also analyzed the effect of rainfall variability on aus (pre-monsoon rice) production, which has great potential in this area. Additionally, we assessed the frequency and return periods of extreme rainfall events during the dry months (Nov-Apr) to evaluate the risks and opportunities for rabi/non-rice crop cultivation. We found that higher return periods of extreme events might delay the sowing of rabi crops and have adverse effects, particularly during their maturity phases. This study emphasizes the optimized sowing windows and climate-resilient cropping systems to support sustainable crop intensification and diversification in coastal Bangladesh. 2025-07 2025-11-06T06:14:53Z 2025-11-06T06:14:53Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177625 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Islam, HM Touhidul, Sharif Ahmed, Mohammad Kamruzzaman, Virender Kumar, and Humnath Bhandari. "Impact of Rainfall Variability and Extremes on Crop Intensification and Diversification in the Coastal Region of Bangladesh." Environmental and Sustainability Indicators 27 (2025): 100813.
spellingShingle climate change
salinity
food security
rainfall patterns
agricultural productivity
cropping systems
coastal areas
Islam, H. M. Touhidul
Ahmed, Sharif
Kamruzzaman, Mohammad
Kumar, Virender
Bhandari, Humnath
Impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh
title Impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh
title_full Impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh
title_fullStr Impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh
title_short Impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of Bangladesh
title_sort impact of rainfall variability and extremes on crop intensification and diversification in the coastal region of bangladesh
topic climate change
salinity
food security
rainfall patterns
agricultural productivity
cropping systems
coastal areas
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177625
work_keys_str_mv AT islamhmtouhidul impactofrainfallvariabilityandextremesoncropintensificationanddiversificationinthecoastalregionofbangladesh
AT ahmedsharif impactofrainfallvariabilityandextremesoncropintensificationanddiversificationinthecoastalregionofbangladesh
AT kamruzzamanmohammad impactofrainfallvariabilityandextremesoncropintensificationanddiversificationinthecoastalregionofbangladesh
AT kumarvirender impactofrainfallvariabilityandextremesoncropintensificationanddiversificationinthecoastalregionofbangladesh
AT bhandarihumnath impactofrainfallvariabilityandextremesoncropintensificationanddiversificationinthecoastalregionofbangladesh