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AMT 201: Introductory Agrometeorology

Credit Hours: 2 (2+0)
Full Marks: 50 (Theory: 50, Practical: 0)


Course Objectives

Upon completion, students will be able to:

  • Understand atmospheric processes and weather/climate conditions.
  • Measure and analyze meteorological variables relevant to agriculture.
  • Use agrometeorological forecasting tools and remote sensing/GIS for crop decision-making.
  • Understand climate change impacts and agro-climatic zoning in Nepal.

I. Syllabus

  • Definitions, scope, and role of agrometeorology in agriculture.
  • Meteorological variables: air temperature, humidity, solar radiation, soil temperature/moisture, precipitation, wind, sunshine duration.
  • Measurement techniques, housing for instruments, statistical analysis of variables.
  • Evaporation and transpiration: factors affecting rates, estimation of evapotranspiration.
  • Agro-meteorological normals for crops, crop zonation, and significance for production.
  • Weather and climate forecasting: now-casting, short-range, medium-range, long-range forecasts.
  • Drought and flood classifications; major events affecting Nepalese agriculture.
  • Agro-meteorological models (DSSAT, CROPWAT).
  • Climate change and impacts on agriculture in Nepal.
  • Automatic weather station (AWS) technologies: sensors, data loggers, communication, advantages over manual observation.
  • Remote sensing (RS) and geographic information system (GIS) applications in agriculture.

II. Course Outline

S.N.TopicNo. of Lectures
1Definitions, scope, and role of agro-meteorology in agriculture2
2Agro-meteorological variables and measurement (temperature, RH, solar radiation, soil moisture/temperature, precipitation, wind, sunshine, evaporation)6
3Agro-meteorological normals for main crops; housing for instruments; statistical calculations of meteorological variables3
4Weather and climate forecasts for agriculture; types of forecasts (NC, VSRF, SRF, MRF, LRF); Nepal scenario3
5Weather vs climate; climatic classifications (Köppen, Thornthwaite); climates of Nepal2
6Drought and flood; major events in Nepal; drought classifications, aridity index2
7Agro-meteorological models: DSSAT, CROPWAT2
8Climate change and agricultural impacts; variability, atmospheric changes, hydrology, crop and livestock impacts in Nepal3
9Agro-climatic zoning of Nepal2
10Automatic weather station technologies; components, sensors, data loggers, advantages and limitations4
Total30

References

  • Mavi, H.S., & Tupper, G.J. (2004). Agro-meteorology: Principles and Applications of Climate Studies in Agriculture. Haworth Press.
  • Mavi, H.S. (1998). Introduction to Agro-Meteorology. Oxford & IBH.
  • World Meteorological Organization (WMO). (2008). Guidelines for Curricula in Agricultural Meteorology No. 258.
  • Rao, G.S.L.H.V. Prasad (2008). Agricultural Meteorology. Prentice Hall of India.
  • Sabins, J.R. Remote Sensing Principles and Interpretation. W.H. Freeman & Co.
  • Heywood, I., Cornelius, S., & Carver, S. (1999). An Introduction to Geographic Information System. Addison-Wesley.
  • Chrisman, N. (1997). Exploring Geographic Information System. John Wiley & Sons.