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Study: Climate change could bring new U.S. Dust Bowl
[Link is Broken] http://www.cnn.com
POSTED: 4:01 a.m. EDT, April 6, 2007
WASHINGTON (AP) — Changing climate will mean increasing drought in the
southwestern United States, where water already is in short supply, according to
a new study.
“The bottom line message for the average person and also for the states and
federal government is that they’d better start planning for a Southwest region
in which the water resources are increasingly stretched,” said Richard Seager of
Columbia University’s Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory.
Seager is lead author of the study published online Thursday by the journal
Science.
Researchers studied 19 computer models of the climate, using data dating
back to 1860 and projecting into the future. The same models were used in
preparing the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The consensus of the models was that climate in the southwestern United
States and parts of northern Mexico began a transition to drier conditions late
in the 20th century and is continuing the trend in this century, as climate
change alters the movement of storms and moisture in the atmosphere.
The reduction in rainfall could reach levels of the 1930s Dust Bowl that
ranged throughout the Midwestern United States, Seager said in a telephone
interview.
That does not mean there would be dust storms like those of the 1930s,
Seager said, because conditions at that time were complicated by poor
agricultural practices. But he said the reduction in rainfall could be
equivalent to those times when thousands of farmers abandoned their parched land
and moved away in search of jobs.
Currently, most water in the Southwest is used in agriculture, but the
urban population of the region is growing and so the water needs of people are
growing as well, he explained.
“So, in a case where there is a reduced water supply, there will have to be
some reallocation between the users,” Seager said. “The water available is
already fully allocated.”
He said he feels that adjustments can be made to deal with the change,
perhaps by withdrawing some land from production and by conserving water in
urban areas.
“But it’s something that needs to be planned for,” Seager said. “It’s time
to start thinking how to deal with that.”
Jonathan T. Overpeck, director of the Institute for the Study of Planet
Earth at the University of Arizona, said the finding “agrees with what is
already happening in the Southwest, and will be further complicated by the
already declining spring snowpack due to warming.”
“These are scary results, but scary in part because they are results of
well thought-out scientific work by a large number of strong scientists,” said
Overpeck, who was not part of the research team.
In other reports in this week’s issue of Science:
• Researchers led by Alan Gange of the University of London reported that
as a result of warming temperatures some species of mushrooms and toadstools in
southern England have begun to fruit twice a year rather than once.
They found that some species that previously only fruited in October now
also fruit in April. In addition, the length of the fruiting period has grown
over time and in the last decade alone it has more than doubled, they
found.
• Deep waters in the North Atlantic some 125,000 years ago were warmer than
they are now and may have helped melt the Antarctic ice sheets, according to
researchers led by Jean-Claude Duplessy of the Laboratory of Climate and the
Environment of Institute Pierre Simon Laplace outside Paris.
Deep North Atlantic water flows south, then rises to the surface near
Antarctica. The researchers said current warming climate trends indicate similar
conditions to that period could occur in the next couple of centuries.
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