Research Article

Impact of Extreme Climate on Orage Farming Surjan System in Botola

Authors

  • Gusti Rusmayadi Faculty of Agriculture, University of Lambung Mangkurat, Indonesia
  • Umi Salawati Faculty of Agriculture, University of Lambung Mangkurat, Indonesia
  • Dewi Erika Adriani Faculty of Agriculture, University of Lambung Mangkurat, Indonesia

Abstract

The determining factor for the success of agricultural cultivation in tidal swampland is water availability, which fluctuates throughout the plant's growth. The availability of water for oranges has a significant role in the final production of the product. In Indonesia, there are three types of rain patterns with variations in the growing season related to water availability: the rainy season between October and March and the dry season between April and September. Climate extremes such as drought (El-Niño) and wetness (La-Niña) fluctuate dynamically, impact shifts at the beginning and end of the growing season, and hurt citrus crop productivity. Therefore, an analysis of rice planting time in tidal swampland in Barito Kuala under extreme climatic events was carried out. The research was conducted in September – December 2020 with the survey method. The data was dug in-depth on the research respondents: citrus farmers, fruit traders, and related agencies. The number of samples was 90 people (45 male farmers and 45 female farmers). Two different villages were surveyed in each sub-district according to the type of tidal land, namely Marabahan sub-district (SP1 village and SP2 village), type A, Mandastana (Karang Indah village and Karang Bunga village) type B, and Cerbon sub-district. (Village of Simpang Nungki and Sungai Kambat) Type C. Planting time in tidal land begins after the amount of rainwater is sufficient to dissolve the iron content in the water. The probability of an El-Niño occurrence with an intensity of 1, 2, 3, and 4 years has the highest frequency of occurrence—respectively 3, 3, 5, and 3 times with probability around 16.7% to 27.8%. Meanwhile, La-Nia with an intensity of once a year with the highest frequency eight times with a 40.0% chance. La-Nia events coexist with El-Nio 15 times, and generally, El-Nio precedes La-Nia by about 44%. The cropping pattern in tidal swampland shows high resistance to climate change. Namely, the planting time has not changed much for decades under different climatic conditions.

Article information

Journal

Journal of Environmental and Agricultural Studies

Volume (Issue)

3 (1)

Pages

01-07

Published

2022-01-14

How to Cite

Impact of Extreme Climate on Orage Farming Surjan System in Botola. (2022). Journal of Environmental and Agricultural Studies, 3(1), 01-07. https://doi.org/10.32996/jeas.2022.3.1.1

Downloads

Views

180

Downloads

72

Keywords:

El-Nio, extreme climate, citrus, La-Niña, tidal land

Similar Articles

1-10 of 68

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.