“…Among the drought indices, standardized precipitation index (SPI) is widely used (Moreira, 2015;Zhang et al, 2017;Merabti et al, 2018;Oliveira-Júnior et al, 2018;Tirivarombo et al, 2018) because it can determine drought at different time scales and only requires precipitation data (Ma et al, 2013). However, some uncertainties exist in its calculation due to the probability distribution functions in fitting the precipitation data, parameter estimation methods and errors, time scales and data length, and so on (e.g., Wu et al, 2005;Stagge et al, 2015;Vergni et al, 2017;Beyaztas et al, 2018). McKee et al (1993), the proposers of SPI, suggested using gamma distribution to fit the cumulative precipitation in calculating this index, whereas many scholars such as like Cindrić et al (2012), Hong et al (2013), Gabriel and Monica (2015), Wu et al (2016), and Vergni et al (2017) indicated that the applicability of theoretical distributions in describing the cumulative precipitation was inconsistent across different regions.…”