Climate and Ag in the news
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The “Spring Predictability Barrier” is well known to climatologists as the difficulty we have in predicting whether an El Nino will occur in the coming months in springtime compared to other times of the year. This is due to the seasonality of El Nino, which is usually strongest around Christmas (hence the name “El Nino”,…
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Vox.com had a thoughtful article about possible changes in California agriculture over time under a warmer climate and how it might impact other areas of the country. In particular the Southeast was identified as a place where some agricultural production might move. However, there are differences between the climate of California and the Southeast which…
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The blog site for UGA Urban Agriculture posted a story last week about the establishment of the National Resources Conservation Service eighty years ago during the Dust Bowl. You might be interested in this story, which is at https://site.extension.uga.edu/urbanag/2015/04/2300/.
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
I’ve seen several interesting stories about changes in forests over time and how climate is impacted by those changes. Here are a few that I thought were particularly interesting. Nature posted a long news article back in 2014 that I just ran across about how deforestation of the tropical rainforests is changing the local climate…
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Climatologists around the country have been watching the development of El Nino over the last year. In 2014 we thought a strong El Nino might be starting, but the pattern never quite developed the “oomph” needed to cross the threshold into official El Nino territory. However, many of the climate impacts we saw in the…
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The Washington Post published an article this week discussing the impacts of the continuing Western drought on power production (link). Hydropower capacity at Hoover Dam has dropped by almost 25 percent since 2000. In California, where the drought is worse, hydropower has dropped 60 percent in the last four years. Generation of electricity by hydropower…
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Today marks the fourth anniversary of one of the most deadly outbreaks of tornadoes ever to hit the Southeast. It was part of a superoutbreak of tornadoes and severe weather that lasted from April 25 to 28 across the Southeast in 2011. Wikipedia has an entry which describes the full extent of the event, including…