By Katherine Bagley, InsideClimate News
Drought conditions in more than half of the United States have slipped into a pattern that climatologists say is uncomfortably similar to the most severe droughts in recent U.S. history, including the 1930s Dust Bowl and the widespread 1950s drought.
The 2013 drought season is already off to a worse start than in 2012 or 2011—a trend that scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration say is a good indicator, based on historical records, that the entire year will be drier than last year, even if spring and summer rainfall and temperatures remain the same. If rainfall decreases and temperatures rise, as climatologists are predicting will happen this year, the drought could be even more severe.
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The federal researchers also say there is less than a 20 percent chance the drought will end in the next six months.
“There were certainly pockets of drought as we went into spring last year, but overall, the situation was much better than it is now,” said Tom Karl, a climatologist and director of NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center. “We are going to have to watch really closely. Last year was bad enough.”
In February, 54.2 percent of the contiguous United States experienced drought conditions, compared to 39 percent at the same time last year. Large swaths of South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, and Montana—which entered last year’s major agricultural growing season with very moist conditions—are now battling severe and extreme drought as farmers get ready to plant their spring crops.
The outlooks for rainfall and temperature are similarly bleak.
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NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center forecast last week that Texas, Oklahoma, and the Pacific Northwest will likely get less rainfall in 2013 than in 2012, and that the entire nation will experience a warmer summer than last year.
“Here in Texas, we’re worried about experiencing similar impacts on our agricultural industry that we had in 2011,” said John Nielsen-Gammon, the Texas state climatologist. “The fact that we’re starting off with water levels and reservoirs lower than they’ve been in decades just makes matters worse.”
NOAA has worked for years to find ways to predict when a drought will start and how long it will last. If climatologists had known that the Dust Bowl would stretch for nine years or that 1950s drought would last for five, farmers might have switched their agricultural practices, planted different crops, or used the remaining water more carefully.
By looking back at the environmental factors that helped ease or end historic droughts, researchers also have formed an idea of the weather conditions needed to stop a drought, said Mike Brewer, a climatologist who manages the National Climatic Data Center’s Drought Portal. But those predictions aren’t accurate beyond a six-month timeframe, because historical droughts can only tell them so much.
“Every drought has a different flavor,” Brewer said. “They form in different conditions and are controlled by different factors.”
The Dust Bowl in the 1930s, for instance, was caused by above-average temperatures and poor farming practices, Karl said. Farmers plowed their land too deep and too frequently, stripping away the plant life that held the soil together. Once the dirt became airborne, the dark particles absorbed incoming heat from the sun, stabilized the atmosphere, and stopped the formation of rain-inducing thunderclouds.
Modern farming practices have reduced the dust, so that isn’t the problem this time around. What gives the current drought its own “flavor” is climate change, Karl said.
“We have a lot more greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, so temperatures are warmer than they would have been in the 1930s,” he said. “These warmer temperatures increase evaporation, which makes it drier, which in turn makes it even warmer.”
The Dust Bowl and the 1950s drought aren’t necessarily the worse-case scenarios, said Nielsen-Gammon, the Texas climatologist. Tree ring records indicate that over the past 1,000 years, North America has suffered from droughts that lasted for decades and were much more severe than those in recent history.
“It just gives us a sense of what’s possible,” Nielsen-Gammon said.
This article was written by Katherine Bagley and published in InsideClimate News on March 28, 2013. Photo by David Kozlowski/Flickr.