Page 6 Drought and La Nina New data sets focus on rainfall, streamflow BY DAVE AMBER The Battalion Two different groups of scientists re leased reports this month bringing new in sight into the El Nino and La Nina weath er phenomena and their effects on weather patterns in the United States. The first report is a collection of glob al rainfall data assembled by NASA that gives climate researchers physical data for testing climate models. The second is an analysis of U.S. streamflow data by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) that will help deter mine when the effects of La Niiia might cause wetter or drier conditions across the country. The reports come at a time when Texas and the Southwest have been grappling with another period of drought that scientists generally blame on the current La Nina. “Weather across the United States has been consistent with a La Nina pat tern," Dr. John Niclsen-Gammon, act ing Texas slate climatologist and Texas A&M associate professor of Atmos pheric Sciences, said. “We have a strong La Nina pattern in place, and according to long-term weather models, we have a high prob ability of warmer and drier weather than normal through most of the spring,” Travis Miller, an agronomist with the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, said. “This, to a large degree, explains the drought conditions and warm weather we have been experiencing throughout the summer and fall,” he said. The analysis, covering a 20-year peri od, should help researchers understand cli mate variations by using real observations to aid in determining the effectiveness of models for future climate changes. Dr. Robert Adler, a NASA scientist at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. and project leader for the agency’s Global Precipitation Climatol ogy Project (GPCP), unveiled the database this month at a California meeting of the American Meteorological Society. “Before we can use models to suc cessfully predict El Nino’s and other cli mate phenomena, they must be able to re produce these observations,” Adler said. “With this information, we can better understand these phenomena and the crit ical regional precipitation variations asso ciated with them.” Only in the past few years have sci entists been able to create sophisticated simulations. “The data sets would be good tests for new models when we simulate climate change and as we look at surface changes,” A&M’sNielsen-Gammon said. “The models will help us to predict future climate changes.” thousands of streamflow gauges, these maps show which parts of the country should experience high or low flows dur ing the La Niiia period. “We’ve looked at La Nina years and determined where there’s a higher chance of having unusually high flows and where there’s a higher chance of having unusu ally low flows,” Dr. Michael Dellinger, a USGS hydrologist, said. The researchers predicted that for the first six months of 2000, streamflow in parts of the Southwest will be in the low er third of recorded levels. These predictions are important to state water managers who are tasked with mak ing sure there is a sufficient supply of wa ter available for rural and urban areas. “We can't control precipitation, l ather it comes or it doesn’t. But we can manage water,” Dettinger said. “We can decide now to intervene and make changes to reservoirs or divert wa ter long before an emergency happens if we know the likelihood of having a prob lem is increased. So the streamflow fore casts are of special interest.” AUS' tale con r points ise tax,! layv Vednesc rail legi ise tax o “By i land ovt jople o anted ta Simili lax is lev exas. long wit lax w as a Irs from iantage. Mark JULY AUGUST | SEPTEMBER DECEMBER Studying streamflovvs to predict La Niiia effects Drought hutting Texas agriculture Studying precipitation levels to test climate models The new data set compiled by NASA scientists brings forth information about precipitation levels around the world. The report from USGS climate scien tists said something that many farmers in Texas already knew. This spring, rivers in Texas and the Southwest may be among the driest in recorded history as the region experiences its third year out of four years with drought conditions. The climatologists place blame for cur rent weather conditions on La Nina. From statistical surveys of stream flows of past La N iiia years, the researchers have developed new maps to help predict the ef fects of future ones. Based on the researchers’ analyses of For Travis Miller, June 26, 1999 is a date he wants to wash from his memory . “That was the last time large areas of the state were covered in rainfall," Miller, who serves on the state’s Drought Advi sory Council, said. Texas, now in the middle of the winter w heat growing season and heading into com season, is suffering its third year of drought in four years. The water shortages and unseasonably high temperatures are hurting the agricul tural economy in Texas and other parts of the Southwest. “The agriculture economy is in tatters,” Miller said. State Agriculture Commissioner Susan El Nino and La Nina refer to two extremes of a climate cycle known as the El t In El Nino, unusually warm surface waters move through the eastern P t »cific r* ening of the normal east to west trade winds along the equator. This allows w coast of South America. During La Nina, the other extreme of ENSO, the trade winds become stronger water to the surface. The eastern Pacific becomes colder than normal. Texas streamflow has been decreasing during the La Nina period. ROBERT HYHECOn* ’X) Southern Oscillation,o ir the equator, caused bi t ni water to build up along d coastal upwel Combs said that the Texas agricultural in dustry, w hich has not fully recov ered from the 1996 and 1998 droughts, is heading lor a crisis. Problems with drought led 75 Texas counties to be declared eligible for feder al disaster assistance, with 13 more wait ing for approval. “The dry winter is taking many of our farmers into a spring planting sea son with no surface soil moisture and no subsurface soil moisture,” Combs said. “We are six weeks away from planting com in South Texas, and soil moisture is needed. If it doesn’t start raining, many areas of the stale may not see any spring planting.” According to Miller, because agricul tural and urban areas ultimately consume water from the same sources, water con servation efforts play an important role in mitigating the drought crisis. For example, in San Antonio, the city and the counties west of the citv all draw I dv Aoisl ” Mill >peiati 'Sowcit .between Locally. Miller large amount of c aid ihattbr: >m petition t DENI [J> tiao Judi ^^■ressed it 1 but it i phone go I Vick, district C judges fc Charges si Jell phoni I Durini sued 25 c< the offens mediately S i 00 or bi I Six of charges it been aga lawyers. 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