The water cycle and water insecurity EQ 2 Flashcards
Define drought.
A creeping hazard that causes a period of abnormally dry weather in a region causing a significant unbalance in the local water cycle leading to water insecurity.
What are the four different types of drought?
Meteorological drought - lack of precipitation
Hydrological drought - when visible water sources dry up e.g streams and lakes.
Agricultural drought - when soil moisture deficit
Socio-economic drought - food deficit or famine due to failure of crops.
Changes in drought patterns
Areas that are severly affected by drought has doubles in the last 30 years to include more than 30% of Earths terrestrial land.
Areas affected include Southern Europe, Canada, Asia and Western Australia.
Drought in the Aral Sea.
The Aral sea is now only 10% of its original volume.
One of the largest problems is tributaries being diverted to water farmland to water cotton crop to fuel growing clothing industry.
What are the three different measurements of drought?
Palmer Drought Severity Index - used for long term drought, looks at the duration and intensity of atmospheric conditions associated with drought.
Crop Moisture Index - used by farmers during the growing system to quickly detect short term agricultural drought.
Palmer Hydrological Drought Index - used to look at the impact of drought on local hydrological systems.
Why does the western USA suffer more drought than the east?
Large mountain ranges such as Appalachian and Rocky Mountains divide the east and west.
Air masses arrive from the Atlantic on the eastern coast, air masses rise on the eastern side of the mountain causing orographic rainfall.
West falls in the rain shadow
Virginia 44 inches of rain a year
California 31 inches of rain a year.
What do synoptic weather charts show?
Movement of low and high pressure air masses.
domed = high pressure pointed = low pressure
Isobars = mark areas of equal pressure.
What happens at areas of low pressure?
Warm air evaporates and rises.
Then condenses causing precipitation.
E.g tropics
What happens at areas of high pressure?
Cold air sinks
Often blue skies, dry, lack of precipitation
e.d deserts.
What is the ITCZ?
The inter-tropical convergence zone.
Low pressure belt near the equator that migrates with the changing position of the thermal equator due to Earth’s tilt on its axis.
When it is directly above their is intense evaporation from the suns heat causing rapid precipitation.
Its movement causes wet and dry seasons.
Where is the ITCZ in July v January?
July - Guatemala, El Salvador, Libya, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Northern India and Northern China
January - Brazil, DRC, Mozambique, Indonesia
Briefly explain patterns of the Global atmospheric circulation model and weather patterns.
Cells: Polar, Ferrel and Hadley.
Hadley Ferrel Boundary - high pressure - deserts 30 to 50 degrees latitude.
Ferrel Polar Boundary, hadley hadley boundary - low pressure zones 0 degrees is the tropics 60 degrees low pressure UK
How does mid latitude blocking anticyclones cause drought in mid-lattitudes?
Frontal rainfall occurs at low pressure or depressions.
The track of depressions in the northern hemisphere is controlled by the polar jet stream, a fast moving mass of air in the upper troposphere.
Occassionaly the jet stream decreases in speed or breaks up.
This allows high pressure anticyclones from the subtropics to move northwards.
Anticyclones bring stable weather pushing out rain-bearing depressions causing drought in mid-lattitudes.
What are ENSO cycles?
Term used to describe a variation in atmospheric and ocean temperatures in the South Pacifc Ocean between western Australia and South America.
Can cause complex weather patterns for 9-12 months
El NIna _ exaggerated normal (wet AUS dry SA)
El Nino - Opposte conditions (dry AUS wet SA)
Occurs every 3 to 7 years.
What causes an El Nino year?
Air pressure over West Coast of America becomes high as the water becomes warmer and evaporates.
Air pressure over Australia becomes low as colder water.
This causes trade winds to change direction and blow west to east.
Pushes warm water to South America.
Causes drought and negative water budgets in Australia.
Causes flooding and positive water budgets in South America.
What climate hazards are associated with El Nino?
Australian bush fires - March 2020 18.6 million hectares burnt.
Between 2002 and 2009 western Australia received its worst drought in 125 years due to ENSO cycles.
Teleconnections - caused Dry, warm conditions in Indonesia and souther Africa.
- caused wet conditions in western Europe and Southern USA.
In 2016 during an El Nino event drought was exacerbated in Africa, in Ethiopia 4/5 crops failed and 2 million children suffered worsening maluntrition.
Humans mainly cause deficits in the water cycle by…
Pollution : makes a water source unsuitable for use
Over-abstraction: taking too much water from water stores leading to depleting supplies
The Sahel drought overview
Sahel in semi-arid
located at 19 degrees latitude, suffers from desertification
Vulnerable to drought because economy relies on cotton and millet crop outports to the rest of Africa.
Physical causes of drought in the Sahel
Average temperatures of 29 degrees and only 250-500mm of rainfall a year
85% of rainfall is in the summer, lack technology to store water and high temperatures cause rapid evaporation
Human causes of drought in the Sahel.
Around 80% of drylands in the Sahel have suffered from land degradation due to over-cultivation and cattle ranching, decreases soil moisture capacity - agricultural drought.
Increase in kerosene prices has caused a demand in deforestation for fuel wood, 90% of wood is used as fuel wood, catalyst for soil erosion.
Destruction of crop land due to civil war
95% of agriculture is rainfed - vulnerable
In 1995 40% of sub-saharan countries were in debt, limited finance for investment in local water schemes.
Impacts of drought in the Sahel.
100,000 killed during 1973 drought
25% of all cattle were killed or slaughtered.
1991 4 million people facing starvation - reliant on food aid.
Human causes of drought in Australia.
Over extraction of Murray-Darling river - supplies 75% of water but only covers 14% of land.
Highly developed country with water intensive technology, consumes 340 litres of water per person per day, population grows by 1.4% per year.
Physical causes of drought in Australia
El Nino- 2016 worst drought in 125 years.
Recieves 455mm of rain per year.
Worlds driest continent, 7 degree increase in temp and 40% decrease in rainfall is expected by 2070.
What are Australias drought prevention techniques?
Are they successful?
Restiction on agriculture water usage only knocked 1% of Australia’s economy in 2006-7
Use Grey water - recycled domestic water e.g from washing machines- for agricultural usage.
For stage drought plan- starting with only being able to water lawns for two hours a day to banning car washing and outdoor sprinklers/ hosepipe.
Refusal to sign Kyoto Protocol - failure to mitigate climate change which may exaggerate drought and ENSO cycles.