4.6 Article

An Attempt to Utilize a Regional Dew Formation Model in Kenya

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13091261

Keywords

dew yield; spatial and temporal; cluster analysis; dew formation zones; arid; semi-arid

Funding

  1. Finnish Academy: Academy of Finland Flagship [337549]
  2. Academy of Finland Center of Excellence program (CoE-ATM) [307331]
  3. Academy Professor project, TAITAWATER (Integrated land coverclimate-ecosystem process study for water management in East African highlands) [312571, 282842]
  4. Academy Professor project, DF-TRAP (Development of cost-effective fog and dew collectors for water management in semiarid and arid regions of developing countries [257382]
  5. Maa-ja vesitekniikan tuki ry (MVTT foundation)
  6. CHIESA project by Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland
  7. University of Helsinki

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Model evaluation against experimental data showed that the model effectively predicted the occurrence of dew formation but overestimated the harvestable dew amount. Adjusting the factor revealed the seasonal and spatial variation of dew formation in Kenya.
Model evaluation against experimental data is an important step towards accurate model predictions and simulations. Here, we evaluated an energy-balance model to predict dew formation occurrence and estimate its amount for East-African arid-climate conditions against 13 months of experimental dew harvesting data in Maktau, Kenya. The model was capable of predicting the dew formation occurrence effectively. However, it overestimated the harvestable dew amount by about a ratio of 1.7. As such, a factor of 0.6 was applied for a long-term period (1979-2018) to investigate the spatial and temporal variation of the dew formation in Kenya. The annual average of dew occurrence in Kenya was similar to 130 days with dew yield > 0.1 L/m(2)/day. The dew formation showed a seasonal cycle with the maximum yield in winter and minimum in summer. Three major dew formation zones were identified after cluster analysis: arid and semi-arid regions; mountain regions; and coastal regions. The average daily and yearly maximum dew yield were 0.05 and 18; 0.9 and 25; and 0.15 and 40 L/m(2)/day; respectively. A precise prediction of dew occurrence and dew yield is very challenging due to inherent limitations in numerical models and meteorological input parameters.

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