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Machine Learning to Characterize Hydro-Climate Impacts and Thresholds to Rainfed Agricultural Productivity
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  • Steven John Burian,
  • Oroza Carlos A,
  • J. Marshall Shepherd,
  • Daniyal Hassan,
  • Vengus Panhwar,
  • Ryan Curtis Johnson
Steven John Burian
The University of Utah
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Oroza Carlos A
University of Utah
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J. Marshall Shepherd
University of Georgia
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Daniyal Hassan
University of Utah
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Vengus Panhwar
Mehran University of Engineering and Technology
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Ryan Curtis Johnson
University of Utah

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Abstract

Sparse observational data in developing regions leads to uncertainty about how hydro-climatic factors influence crop phases and productivity, knowledge of which is essential to mitigating food security threats induced by climate change. In this study, NASA Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM), and Global Land Data Assimilation System (GLDAS) data products bypass spatiotemporal limitations and drive machine learning algorithms developed to characterize hydro-climate-productivity interactions. Extensive feature engineering processes these products into nearly 4000 metrics, designed to decompose crop growing season hydro-climate conditions. Dimensionality reduction with bidirectional step-wise regression, Multi-Adaptive-Regression-Splines (MARS), and Random Forest algorithms are explored to determine key temporal hydro-climate drivers to agricultural productivity, with each method recognizing unique linear and non-linear predictors. Finally, multi-variate regression, MARS, and Random Forest models are trained on the drivers to predict seasonal crop yield. We apply this hydro-climate-productivity framework to investigate rabi wheat productivity on Pakistan’s Potohar Plateau. Here, we identify six of wheat’s ten phenological phases that display strong hydro-climate responses, with the shooting phase exhibiting sensitivity to precipitation intensity, minimum soil moisture, and sub-zero temperatures. In addition, the plateau’s heterogeneous climate-productivity connections are captured well by the calibrated models, strengthening their application for studying broader climate change impacts. The integration of remote sensing products and machine learning offers an effective framework to bypass in-situ data limitations and decompose climate-crop productivity relationships, thus improving drought onset recognition and food security forecasting.