Recent Developments in Some Long-Term Drought Drivers
Abstract
:1. Land Use Changes in the Last 30 Years
2. Wildfires
3. Deforestation
4. Urbanisation
5. Conclusions on Land Use Trends and Drought
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. IPCC Macro Regions
Abbreviation | Name |
---|---|
ARC | Arctic Ocean, islands, and coasts |
CGI | Canadian Artic Islands, Greenland, Iceland |
ALA | Alaska and North West Canada |
WNA | Western North America |
CAN | Central North America |
ENA | Eastern North America |
NEU | Northern Europe |
CEU | Central Europe |
MED | Mediterranean |
WAS | Western Asia |
CAS | Central Asia |
NAS | Northern Asia |
TIB | Tibetan Plateau |
EAS | Eastern Asia |
SAH | Sahara |
WAF | West Africa |
EAF | East Africa |
SAF | Southern Africa |
CAM | Central America and Mexico |
CAR | Caribbean, small islands |
AMZ | Amazon |
WSA | West Coast South America |
SSA | Southern South America |
NEB | North Eastern Brazil |
SAS | South Asia |
SEA | South East Asia |
NAU | Northern Australia |
SAU | Southern Australia and New Zealand |
Appendix B. Clustering of FAO-EAS Land Use Classes
ESA Class | Grouped Class |
---|---|
10 Cropland, rainfed | 10 Cropland and potential croplands |
20 Cropland irrigated or post flooding | 20 Alluvial and coastal plains |
30 Mosaic croplands > 50%, natural vegetation | 10 Cropland and potential croplands |
40 Mosaic natural vegetation > 50%, cropland | 10 Cropland and potential croplands |
50 Tree cover, broadleaved, evergreen | 50 Forest |
60 Tree cover, deciduous | 50 Forest |
70 Tree cover, needle leaved, evergreen | 50 Forest |
80 Tree cover, needle leaved, deciduous | 50 Forest |
90 Tree cover, mixed leaf type | 50 Forest |
100 Mosaic tree and shrub > 50% | 100 Natural open spaces |
110 Herbaceous > 50% | 110 Grass |
120 Shrubland | 100 Natural open spaces |
130 Grassland | 110 Grass |
140 Lichens and mosses | 100 Natural open spaces |
150 Sparse vegetation | 100 Natural open spaces |
160 Tree cover, flooded, fresh water | 20 Alluvial and coastal plains |
170 Tree cover, flooded, saline water | 20 Alluvial and coastal plains |
180 Shrubs, flooded | 20 Alluvial and coastal plains |
190 Urban areas | 190 Urban |
200 Bare areas | 100 Natural open spaces |
210 Water bodies | 100 Natural open spaces |
220 Permanent snow and ice | 100 Natural open spaces |
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Land Use Type | Drought Impact | Droughts Relief |
---|---|---|
Alluvial and coastal plains | Subsidence, cracking | High groundwater level, cooling through wind |
Cropland and Potential cropland | Failing harvest, groundwater depletion through irrigation | Access to crops close to the city, cooling of area |
Forest | Ignition of wildfire subsequent air pollution, dying of wild species, trees might die. | Strong cooling, water reserve in groundwater, relaxation, some food (nuts, small animals, fish in creeks) |
Grass | Ignition of wildfire subsequent air pollution. Grass recovers, but not all species. | Cooling through wind, access to meat, milk close to the city |
Natural open spaces | Ignition of wildfire, dying of wild species. | Cooling through wind, relaxation, some food (berries, small wildlife) |
Urban | Extreme temperatures, additional air pollution, groundwater depletion, surface water and reservoir depletion. | Shelter for humans and the animals and plants accompanying them. |
Land Use Practice | Drought Impact | Mediation Method |
---|---|---|
Deforestation | Less shadow, less cloud formation, less rainwater percolation to groundwater reservoirs, higher average temperatures | Reforestation, rewilding, silvopasture, agroforestry, restoration of small landscape elements. Disincentivize relationship deforestation and wildfires, practices of forest clearing though fire in the dry season or during a drought. |
Reservoir construction | Sediment trapped leading to beach erosion downstream, evaporation of reservoir surface water, less fertilisation of flood plains, fish migration blockage, ecosystem disturbance, loss of fertile land. | Smaller reservoirs, fish access points, sediment outlets, cleaning of reservoirs, storage of rainwater in groundwater bodies instead of reservoirs. |
Road construction, urbanization | Groundwater lowering leading to soil subsidence and less groundwater, Increased temperature (black colour of tarmac) heat island effect, Temporary flooding after heavy rainfall (also related to the subsidence of the soil), no storage of the rainwater in the soil, Additional tree cutting/limited tree planting to save on maintenance costs | Creation of additional holes/lakes in the landscape to collect excess rainwater and resupply to groundwater body. Separation of sewage systems to collect rainwater and resupply groundwater bodies. Systematic tree planting along roads, on south face of buildings to provide shadow. Forbidding of pumping after completion of construction. Concentrate on high-rise buildings. Limitation of road construction, favour alternatives for mobility. Grass roofs or white roofs. Construct on soils suitable for construction (protect fertile soils from construction). Allow for wind alleys throughout the urban area. Tax tree covered soils less than covered soils in the urban area. |
Irrigation | Loss of water through evapotranspiration, full failure (no harvest at all) during severe drought, groundwater depletion, dependency of glaciers (not sustainable with current lack of climate policy implementation) | Change to crop types needing less water, move to silvopasture and agroforestry, pricing water for agricultural use, desalination of seawater using solar/wind energy |
River/streams canalization | Low flow during summer/dry season, ecosystem degradation, loss of peat lands, reduced capacity to store water in the land | Allowing rivers/streams to meander again, compensate landowners losing land, restore peat lands and fauna belonging to peat lands (to curb, e.g., mosquitoes) |
Industrial agricultural practices | Reduction of soil organic matter content leading to less soil moisture, compaction of soils due to heavy equipment, lowering of groundwater table to allow for heavy equipment, additional evapotranspiration, and soil erosion due to large size of fields, wind erosion | Stimulate agricultural practices that favour soil quality or tax pesticides. Forbid use of heavy equipment on susceptible soil types, forbid field sizes above a certain threshold, compensate loss of land due to restoration of bushes, hedges, and parcel edge vegetation |
Wildfires | Increased temperature and wind, heating up the landscape, soil erosion due to lack of vegetation cover during heavy rains, reduced capacity of the soil to buffer rainwater, loss of human and wildlife, ecosystem services loss | Reforestation, rewilding, forestation with tree types less susceptible to fire (broadleaves), less focus on (wood) production, more on quality. Landscape variation, large mammal reintroduction (to keep the landscape open) Check on relation deforestation and wildfires, disincentive deforestation (animal fodder production in former Amazon forest plots) |
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de Jager, A.; Corbane, C.; Szabo, F. Recent Developments in Some Long-Term Drought Drivers. Climate 2022, 10, 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030031
de Jager A, Corbane C, Szabo F. Recent Developments in Some Long-Term Drought Drivers. Climate. 2022; 10(3):31. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030031
Chicago/Turabian Stylede Jager, Alfred, Christina Corbane, and Filip Szabo. 2022. "Recent Developments in Some Long-Term Drought Drivers" Climate 10, no. 3: 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030031
APA Stylede Jager, A., Corbane, C., & Szabo, F. (2022). Recent Developments in Some Long-Term Drought Drivers. Climate, 10(3), 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030031