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As rain grows patchier, Andaman and Nicobar island farmers adapt

by Colin Daileda | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Monday, 29 April 2019 02:01 GMT

Tapan Mondal stands on his farm, where he grows pumpkins, papayas, areca nuts, and more, in Chouldari, India, March 6, 2019. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Colin Daileda

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Swapping from rice to vegetables and fruit is helping farmers make the most of climate change's unpredictable rain

By Colin Daileda

CHOULDARI, India, April 29 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Tapan Mondal used to grow rice, when the rainfall over India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands was still reliable in the dry season, showering the thin layer of island soil with enough moisture for crops to survive until the monsoon.

Now, however, the 49-year-old's island is much drier, and what he is growing has changed.

Near a pond dug into his fields to trap rainwater, chilis, tomatoes, cauliflower and other vegetables now sprout. The pond, covered with a tarp to ward off evaporation, also allows him to raise fish to eat and sell.

Water seeping from the pond into surrounding soil nourishes banana and papaya trees as well, with long roots that can suck up scarce moisture.

The changes mean he now earns more than he used to from growing rice - but crop quality has declined, he said, perhaps because of higher temperatures and longer dry spells.

As climate change takes hold, the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, in India's Bay of Bengal, are seeing more irregular rainfall.

It's an enormous problem for farmers no matter where they sow their crops - on the thin coastal soil of the Andamans, or the porous coral soil of the Nicobars. Both struggle to absorb and hold much water.

Tapan Mondal, left, talks with Biswas T.K., a technical officer at the Central Island Agricultural Research Institute, as his areca nuts dry in the foreground, in Chouldari, India, March 6, 2019. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Colin Daileda

The number of rainy days and the amount of rainfall the islands receive during the dry winter season have dropped in recent years, according to data from 1949-2014 compiled by scientists at the India Meteorological Department and the Central Island Agricultural Research Institute.

In these islands, said Ayyam Velmurugan, a soil scientist with the institute, two weeks of sunshine can suck the soil dry, turning a flood quickly into a drought.

Farmers on India's mainland can sometimes dig for groundwater to make up for a lack of rain, but coastal Andaman soil isn't deep enough to hold much water, and digging into the coral soil of the Nicobar islands can flood a field with saltwater, scientists say.

All this is creating challenges for the 380,000 people who live on the archipelago, more than a quarter of them in the capital, Port Blair, according to data from the last nationwide census in 2011.

RAIN WOES

One of the problems facing the drying Andaman islands is that the deepest soil - that good at soaking up rain - lies in the interior regions that are largely mountainous, forested and undeveloped, Velmurugan said.

Moving water from inland areas to the coast is too costly, he said.

In total, rainfall over the Andaman and Nicobar Islands still hovers near its historical average, Velmurugan said - but now more of it comes during the monsoon, often in heavy cloudbursts. The Indian Ocean has warmed more consistently than the Atlantic and Pacific, according to Roxy Koll, an Indian Ocean warming expert at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology who is currently a visiting scientist at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The warming waters increase evaporation and cause bursts of rain that can erode away soil, scientists say.

This is a constant problem on the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, where morning droplets of rain can flow out to sea by afternoon,

As warming continues, "you can expect this over most of the islands over the Indian Ocean," Koll warned. "It will only add to the agriculture woes."

Tapan Mondal’s home rests under the palm trees, in Chouldari, India, March 6, 2019. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Colin Daileda

FORECASTING

Velmurugan pulled his office door shut on a recent March evening and walked down the hallway, shuffling papers holding district-level weather predictions for the islands' next three days.

The predictions are blasted out twice a week via Whatsapp and text, and broadcast on local radio and television news. They're also printed in newspapers, published online, and posted in village resource centers on remote islands, where tribal farmers can access the information.

Knowledge is a crucial resource in a place where managing climate is an almost everyday affair and farmers need to know when they can capture even a few drops of rain, Velmurugan said.

"Which component of the climate is the problem?" Velmurugan asked. "We have to map it, and identify the trend."

Cracked soil waits for rain at Tapan Mondal’s fields, in Chouldari, India, March 6, 2019. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Colin Daileda

Velmurugan encourages farmers to grow fruit and other tree crops because the long roots of trees can access deeper moisture - and because intense cyclones, which can rip out trees, don't hit the Andaman and Nicobar Islands as often as island nations such as Japan or the Philippines.

A thick canopy of banana and coconut leaves also can shield the land beneath from fierce rainfall.

Velmurugan wants farmers to now use water as efficiently as their land.

When it rains, "you have to think it is an opportunity, so when you have that opportunity you have to use it," he said.

(Reporting by Colin Daileda ; editing by Laurie Goering : (Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women's rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate)

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