Climate Change and Drought: From Past to Future

被引:375
作者
Cook, Benjamin, I [1 ,2 ]
Mankin, Justin S. [2 ,3 ]
Anchukaitis, Kevin J. [4 ]
机构
[1] NASA Goddard Inst Space, 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10009 USA
[2] Columbia Univ, Lamont Doherty Earth Observ, 61 Rt 9W, Palisades, NY 10964 USA
[3] Dartmouth Coll, Dept Geog, 19 Fayerweather Dr, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
[4] Univ Arizona, Sch Geog & Dev, 1064 E Lowell St,POB 210137, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
来源
CURRENT CLIMATE CHANGE REPORTS | 2018年 / 4卷 / 02期
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Drought; Climate change; Paleoclimate; Detection and attribution; WATER-USE EFFICIENCY; NORTH-AMERICAN DROUGHT; FLASH DROUGHTS; SOIL-MOISTURE; UNITED-STATES; POTENTIAL EVAPOTRANSPIRATION; TERRESTRIAL ARIDITY; CALIFORNIA DROUGHT; PLANT-RESPONSES; ATMOSPHERIC CO2;
D O I
10.1007/s40641-018-0093-2
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Drought is a complex and multivariate phenomenon influenced by diverse physical and biological processes. Such complexity precludes simplistic explanations of cause and effect, making investigations of climate change and drought a challenging task. Here, we review important recent advances in our understanding of drought dynamics, drawing from studies of paleoclimate, the historical record, and model simulations of the past and future. Paleoclimate studies of drought variability over the last two millennia have progressed considerably through the development of new reconstructions and analyses combining reconstructions with process-based models. This work has generated new evidence for tropical Pacific forcing of megadroughts in Southwest North America, provided additional constraints for interpreting climate change projections in poorly characterized regions like East Africa, and demonstrated the exceptional magnitude of many modern era droughts. Development of high resolution proxy networks has lagged in many regions (e.g., South America, Africa), however, and quantitative comparisons between the paleoclimate record, models, and observations remain challenging. Fingerprints of anthropogenic climate change consistent with long-term warming projections have been identified for droughts in California, the Pacific Northwest, Western North America, and the Mediterranean. In other regions (e.g., Southwest North America, Australia, Africa), however, the degree to which climate change has affected recent droughts is more uncertain. While climate change-forced declines in precipitation have been detected for the Mediterranean, in most regions, the climate change signal has manifested through warmer temperatures that have increased evaporative losses and reduced snowfall and snowpack levels, amplifying deficits in soil moisture and runoff despite uncertain precipitation changes. Over the next century, projections indicate that warming will increase drought risk and severity across much of the subtropics and mid-latitudes in both hemispheres, a consequence of regional precipitation declines and widespread warming. For many regions, however, the magnitude, robustness, and even direction of climate change-forced trends in drought depends on how drought is defined, with often large differences across indicators of precipitation, soil moisture, runoff, and vegetation health. Increasing confidence in climate change projections of drought and the associated impacts will likely depend on resolving uncertainties in processes that are currently poorly constrained (e.g., land-atmosphere interactions, terrestrial vegetation) and improved consideration of the role for human policies and management in ameliorating and adapting to changes in drought risk.
引用
收藏
页码:164 / 179
页数:16
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