Remote Sensing (Mar 2023)
Dynamic Assessment of Drought Risk of Sugarcane in Guangxi, China Using Coupled Multi-Source Data
Abstract
Globally, drought is an increasing threat to agricultural ecosystems, resulting in impaired crop yields, high food prices, and low incomes for farmers. Fluctuations in crop production and prices can exert a negative transboundary effect on food exporting and importing countries across the world through international trade. Therefore, it is important to regionally assess agricultural drought risk to reduce crop yield reduction by adapting existing systems. In this study, from the perspective of Chinese sugar security, a comprehensive assessment index of drought risk of sugarcane was constructed by considering the atmosphere–soil–crop continuum. Based on disaster-causing factors (hazards) and exposure, vulnerability, and mitigation capabilities of disaster subjects (disaster bearers), a risk assessment model of drought disaster of sugarcane in the growing season was established. Results of this study were three-fold. First, the maximum entropy model accurately reflected the reliability and relative importance of the disaster-causing factors of vegetation condition index (VCI), soil moisture condition index (SMCI), and standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index (SPEI), with the area under the curve value of the comprehensive drought risk of sugarcane being greater than 0.75. Second, the drought frequency and impact range in four growth stages of sugarcane significantly declined with the increasing drought severity. Light drought was prevalent in each growth stage, and the occurrence frequency of severe drought was relatively low. The drought frequency was significantly higher in the seedling and maturity stages than in the tillering and stem elongation stages, and the drought distribution was mainly concentrated in the southwest and central regions. Finally, the spatial distribution characteristics of drought risk significantly differed among the four growth stages of sugarcane. The risk level in the seedling stage declined from the southwest to the northeast. The high risk in the tillering stage was mainly concentrated in the southwest and northeast of the study region. In the stem elongation stage, the southwest became a low- risk area. In the maturity stage, the risk level was higher in the southeast than in the other areas. As sugarcane is majorly planted on dry slopes with uneven rainfall, a lack of good infrastructure, and the further intensification of global warming, sugarcane areas that were highly exposed to drought stress were highly vulnerable to drought risk, which in turn weakens farmers’ willingness to plant, thus threatening the security of sugar and biofuel production.
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