W
|
ith an El Niño
looming large this summer, it is very likely we will start to hear quite a bit
about drought over the coming months.
Inevitably, at some point you will hear someone say that the
warmer temperatures are making the drought worse. This is guaranteed to cause
confusion because it’s not actually how droughts work.
For a drought-prone country, it is quite surprising how few
Australians really understand them. Most believe it is a simple equation:
rainfall goes down and the temperature rises, leading to more evaporation and
an increasingly parched landscape.
But the truth is much more interesting and complex, and the
idea that increased evaporation is responsible for common droughts is
completely wrong. In fact the issue of how droughts develop is a bit of a
chicken-and-egg situation.
The first part of the general idea about drought – that it
is kicked off by a decline in rainfall – is correct. But it is the cascading
set of changes that occur after this that are often misunderstood.
Read the piece on The
Conversation by a professor at the Research School of Earth Sciences and the
Research School of Biology at the Australian National University, Professor Michael Roderick - “El Niño is here and that means droughts, but they don’t work how you might think.”
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