Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Transcending scales of space and time in impact studies of climate and climate change on agrohydrological responses
Author
Schulze, Roland
Publisher
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
Publication Year
2000
Body

The scale "jump" in hydrology and agriculture from the small scale at which individual processes such as infiltration, soil water redistribution, evapotranspiration, soil loss or crop development/yield have been studied, to the global scale at which climate change impacts and international trade in agriculture manifest themselves, has presented agrohydrologists with conceptual as well as practical problems of scales and scaling. In this context, selected scaling issues are, therefore, identified and highlighted. The paper discusses why scaling problems arise, defines concepts and types of scales, poses what are considered key questions with regard to upscaling and downscaling, as well as to dis-aggregation to homogenous landscape response units (HLRUs) and to re-aggregation. Examples from southern Africa are then given of space/time scaling approaches, ranging from country to local-scale levels, followed by an evaluation of types of errors associated with scaling. The paper concludes by identifying what, in the author's perception, some of the challenges are which relate to scaling applications of the "real world" and which hydrologists and agriculturists face in the next few years.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
82
Journal Number
no. 1-3
Journal Pages
185-212
Journal Name
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
Keywords
scale
scaling
hydrology
agriculture
soil moisture
climate change
Economic Aspects
Africa