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EN
The study addresses the long-term trend in rainfall, minimum and maximum temperature, and the climate indices for the river catchments located in the diverse climate of the Western Ghats of India. The dry sub-humid Chaliyar catchment and humid Kajvi catchment have shown a dramatic change in the decadal rainfall, with the decade 1950-1960 being the point of change. The monsoon rainfall has decreased in the Chaliyar and Netravati catchments and increased insignificantly in the Kajvi catchment. With the increase in mean temperature, the number of rainy days is decreasing, and intense rainfall is increasing in the pre-monsoon. The increase in minimum temperature is more severe in all three catchments, irrespective of the region’s climate. The decline in rainy days is more figurative in the humid and per-humid catchments and has seen a 16-20% decrease in Rx 1 day, Rx 3 day, and Rx 5 day in the past six decades with an insignificant increase in the dry subhumid catchment. The frightful increase in warm days/nights with a decrease in cool days/nights has been alarming for the extremity of temperature in future years. The significant changes in the forest area in Chaliyar and Kajvi catchment and the increase in a built-up area in Netravati may have a decisive role in the nonseasonal variability in rainfall and temperature along with increasing greenhouse gases. In the case of meteorological drought studied using the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI), moderate droughts have occurred over the Chaliyar and Kajvi, and extreme droughts over the Netravati catchments with no reduction in the frequency or severity of short-duration extreme rainfall events. The geographical location of the catchment has a greater impact on the characteristics of the rainfall and meteorological drought, and these changes in the hydrological regimes of the catchment have a significant bearing on the water availability in the catchments in the future years.
EN
Surface soil moisture knowledge is important, especially in agriculture and irrigation management. Properties of microwave remote sensing like penetration power and longer wavelength facilitate retrieval of surface soil moisture. ALOS PALSAR-2, quad polarized data are used to retrieve surface soil moisture using polarization decomposition techniques in a marginal farmer small-scale maize feld. The focus of the study is to explore the utility of ALOS PALSAR-2 in retrieving surface soil moisture using the polarization decomposition technique. The demonstration of the study is carried out in Malavalli village, southern India, an agricultural predominant area. The study involves feld soil moisture sampling in synchronous with satellite pass, measuring soil properties, preprocessing of SAR data, polarization decomposition, proportional analysis, regression analysis, model calibration and validation. Van Zyl decomposition gave the highest surface scattering component (43%) and reduced volumetric scattering component compared to Yamaguchi and Freeman–Durden decomposition. Surface scattering component of Yamaguchi decomposition gave a good coefcient of determination (R2=0.8029) with feld-measured surface soil moisture. The semi-empirical model (SEM) was developed using surface scattering component and depolarization ratio with adjusted R2=0.75 at 95% confdence interval. On its comparison with existing soil moisture models, it is observed that the developed model is performing well with RMSE and AEmax of 1.81 and 2.88, respectively. Implying the applicability of ALOS PALSAR-2 in soil moisture retrieval in marginal farmer small-scale maize felds gave satisfactory results of accuracy.
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