679 results on '"Cook, Benjamin I"'
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2. Preseason maize and wheat yield forecasts for early warning of crop failure
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Anderson, Weston, Shukla, Shraddhanand, Verdin, Jim, Hoell, Andrew, Justice, Christina, Barker, Brian, Slinski, Kimberly, Lenssen, Nathan, Lou, Jiale, Cook, Benjamin I., and McNally, Amy
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Drought and deluge: the recurrence of hydroclimate extremes during the past 600 years in eastern Australia’s Natural Resource Management (NRM) clusters
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Palmer, Jonathan G., Verdon-Kidd, Danielle, Allen, Kathryn J., Higgins, Philippa, Cook, Benjamin I., Cook, Edward R., Turney, Christian S. M., and Baker, Patrick J.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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4. Correction to: Drought and deluge: the recurrence of hydroclimate extremes during the past 600 years in eastern Australia’s Natural Resource Management (NRM) clusters
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Palmer, Jonathan G., Verdon‑Kidd, Danielle, Allen, Kathryn J., Higgins, Philippa, Cook, Benjamin I., Cook, Edward R., Turney, Christian S. M., and Baker, Patrick J.
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- 2024
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5. Projected changes in early summer ridging and drought over the Central Plains
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Cook, Benjamin I, Williams, A Park, and Marvel, Kate
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Climate Action ,drought ,central plains ,atmospheric ridging ,paleoclimate ,tree-rings ,CMIP6 ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
Abstract Early summer (May–June–July; MJJ) droughts over the Central Plains are often caused by atmospheric ridging, but it is uncertain if these events will increase in frequency or if their influence on drought severity will change in a warming world. Here, we use tree-ring based reconstructions (1500–2020 CE) of MJJ ridging and 0–200 cm soil moisture with six CMIP6 model ensembles to investigate the response of Central Plains drought dynamics to a moderate warming scenario (SSP2-4.5). By the end of the 21st century (2071–2100), precipitation increases in most models during the preceding months (February–March–April), especially over the northern part of the Central Plains, while changes during MJJ are non-robust. By contrast, vapor pressure deficit increases strongly in all models, resulting in five of the six models projecting robust median soil moisture drying and all six models projecting more rapid seasonal soil moisture declines during the transition into the summer. Major ridging events increase in frequency in some models, and there is strong agreement across all models that when ridging events do occur, they will cause more severe soil moisture drought and seasonal drying at the end of the 21st century. The median multi-model response also indicates, by the end of the 21st century, that the Central Plains will experience a three-fold increase in the risk of drought events equivalent to the most extreme droughts of the last 500 years. Our results demonstrate that even moderate warming is likely to increase early summer soil moisture drought severity and risk over the Central Plains, even in the absence of robust precipitation declines, and that drought responses to major atmospheric ridging events will be significantly stronger.
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- 2022
6. Approaching a thermal tipping point in the Eurasian boreal forest at its southern margin
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Rao, Mukund Palat, Davi, Nicole K., Magney, Troy S., Andreu-Hayles, Laia, Nachin, Baatarbileg, Suran, Byambagerel, Varuolo-Clarke, Arianna M., Cook, Benjamin I., D’Arrigo, Rosanne D., Pederson, Neil, Odrentsen, Lkhagvajargal, Rodríguez-Catón, Milagros, Leland, Caroline, Burentogtokh, Jargalan, Gardner, William R. M., and Griffin, Kevin L.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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7. Growing impact of wildfire on western US water supply
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Williams, A Park, Livneh, Ben, McKinnon, Karen A, Hansen, Winslow D, Mankin, Justin S, Cook, Benjamin I, Smerdon, Jason E, Varuolo-Clarke, Arianna M, Bjarke, Nels R, Juang, Caroline S, and Lettenmaier, Dennis P
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Climate Action ,Climate Change ,Forests ,Seasons ,United States ,Water Supply ,Wildfires ,wildfire ,streamflow ,climate change - Abstract
Streamflow often increases after fire, but the persistence of this effect and its importance to present and future regional water resources are unclear. This paper addresses these knowledge gaps for the western United States (WUS), where annual forest fire area increased by more than 1,100% during 1984 to 2020. Among 72 forested basins across the WUS that burned between 1984 and 2019, the multibasin mean streamflow was significantly elevated by 0.19 SDs (P < 0.01) for an average of 6 water years postfire, compared to the range of results expected from climate alone. Significance is assessed by comparing prefire and postfire streamflow responses to climate and also to streamflow among 107 control basins that experienced little to no wildfire during the study period. The streamflow response scales with fire extent: among the 29 basins where >20% of forest area burned in a year, streamflow over the first 6 water years postfire increased by a multibasin average of 0.38 SDs, or 30%. Postfire streamflow increases were significant in all four seasons. Historical fire-climate relationships combined with climate model projections suggest that 2021 to 2050 will see repeated years when climate is more fire-conducive than in 2020, the year currently holding the modern record for WUS forest area burned. These findings center on relatively small, minimally managed basins, but our results suggest that burned areas will grow enough over the next 3 decades to enhance streamflow at regional scales. Wildfire is an emerging driver of runoff change that will increasingly alter climate impacts on water supplies and runoff-related risks.
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- 2022
8. Rapid intensification of the emerging southwestern North American megadrought in 2020–2021
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Williams, A Park, Cook, Benjamin I, and Smerdon, Jason E
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Climate Action ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Environmental Science and Management - Published
- 2022
9. Irrigation in the Earth system
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McDermid, Sonali, Nocco, Mallika, Lawston-Parker, Patricia, Keune, Jessica, Pokhrel, Yadu, Jain, Meha, Jägermeyr, Jonas, Brocca, Luca, Massari, Christian, Jones, Andrew D., Vahmani, Pouya, Thiery, Wim, Yao, Yi, Bell, Andrew, Chen, Liang, Dorigo, Wouter, Hanasaki, Naota, Jasechko, Scott, Lo, Min-Hui, Mahmood, Rezaul, Mishra, Vimal, Mueller, Nathaniel D., Niyogi, Dev, Rabin, Sam S., Sloat, Lindsey, Wada, Yoshihide, Zappa, Luca, Chen, Fei, Cook, Benjamin I., Kim, Hyungjun, Lombardozzi, Danica, Polcher, Jan, Ryu, Dongryeol, Santanello, Joe, Satoh, Yusuke, Seneviratne, Sonia, Singh, Deepti, and Yokohata, Tokuta
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- 2023
- Full Text
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10. Placing the east-west North American aridity gradient in a multi-century context
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Bishop, Daniel A, Williams, A Park, Seager, Richard, Cook, Edward R, Peteet, Dorothy M, Cook, Benjamin I, Rao, Mukund P, and Stahle, David W
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Climate Action ,drought ,soil moisture ,precipitation ,aridity gradient ,North America ,tree-ring reconstruction ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
Instrumental records indicate a century-long trend towards drying over western North America and wetting over eastern North America. A continuation of these trends into the future would have significant hydroclimatic and socioeconomic consequences in both the semi-arid Southwest and humid East. Using tree-ring reconstructions and hydrologic simulations of summer soil moisture, we evaluate and contextualize the modern summer aridity gradient within its natural range of variability established over the past 600 years and evaluate the effects of observed and anthropogenic precipitation, temperature, and humidity trends. The 2001-2020 positive (wet east-dry west) aridity gradient was larger than any 20 year period since 1400 CE, preceded by the most negative (wet west-dry east) aridity gradient during 1976-1995, leading to a strong multi-decade reversal in aridity gradient anomalies that was rivaled only by a similar event in the late-16th century. The 2001-2020 aridity gradient was dominated by long-term summer precipitation increases in the Midwest and Northeast, with smaller contributions from more warming in the West than the East and spring precipitation decreases in the Southwest. Multi-model mean climate simulations from Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6 experiments suggest anthropogenic climate trends should not have strongly affected the aridity gradient thus far. However, there is high uncertainty due to inter-model disagreement on anthropogenic precipitation trends. The recent strengthening of the observed aridity gradient, its increasing dependence on precipitation variability, and disagreement in modeled anthropogenic precipitation trends reveal significant uncertainties in how water resource availability will change across North America in the coming decades.
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- 2021
11. Projected Changes to Hydroclimate Seasonality in the Continental United States
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Marvel, Kate, Cook, Benjamin I, Bonfils, Céline, Smerdon, Jason E, Williams, A Park, and Liu, Haibo
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Climate Action ,drought ,hydroclimate ,CMIP6 ,future ,seasonality ,projections ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Environmental Science and Management - Published
- 2021
12. Disentangling the Regional Climate Impacts of Competing Vegetation Responses to Elevated Atmospheric CO2
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McDermid, Sonali Shukla, Cook, Benjamin I, De Kauwe, Martin G, Mankin, Justin, Smerdon, Jason E, Williams, A Park, Seager, Richard, Puma, Michael J, Aleinov, Igor, Kelley, Maxwell, and Nazarenko, Larissa
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Climate Action ,Clean Water and Sanitation ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience - Abstract
Biophysical vegetation responses to elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) affect regional hydroclimate through two competing mechanisms. Higher CO2 increases leaf area (LAI), thereby increasing transpiration and water losses. Simultaneously, elevated CO2 reduces stomatal conductance and transpiration, thereby increasing rootzone soil moisture. Which mechanism dominates in the future is highly uncertain, partly because these two processes are difficult to explicitly separate within dynamic vegetation models. We address this challenge by using the GISS ModelE global climate model to conduct a novel set of idealized 2×CO2 sensitivity experiments to: evaluate the total vegetation biophysical contribution to regional climate change under high CO2; and quantify the separate contributions of enhanced LAI and reduced stomatal conductance to regional hydroclimate responses. We find that increased LAI exacerbates soil moisture deficits across the sub-tropics and more water-limited regions, but also attenuates warming by ∼0.5-1°C in the US Southwest, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, and northern South America. Reduced stomatal conductance effects contribute ∼1°C of summertime warming. For some regions, enhanced LAI and reduced stomatal conductance produce nonlinear and either competing or mutually amplifying hydroclimate responses. In northeastern Australia, these effects combine to exacerbate radiation-forced warming and contribute to year-round water limitation. Conversely, at higher latitudes these combined effects result in less warming than would otherwise be predicted due to nonlinear responses. These results highlight substantial regional variation in CO2-driven vegetation responses and the importance of improving model representations of these processes to better quantify regional hydroclimate impacts.
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- 2021
13. U.S. Pacific Coastal Droughts Are Predominantly Driven by Internal Atmospheric Variability
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Baek, Seung H, Smerdon, Jason E, Cook, Benjamin I, and Williams, A Park
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Climate Action ,Life Below Water ,Drought ,Atmosphere-ocean interaction ,Hydrology ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Oceanography ,Geomatic Engineering ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
AbstractDroughts that span the states of Washington, Oregon, and California are rare but devastating due to their large spatial coverage and potential loss of redundancies in water, agricultural, and fire-fighting resources. Such pan-coastal droughts [which we define using boreal summer volumetric soil moisture along the U.S. Pacific coast (32°–50°N, 115°–127°W)] require a more precise understanding of the roles played by the Pacific Ocean and internal atmospheric variability. We employ 16-member ensembles of the Community Atmosphere Model version 5 and Community Climate Model version 3 forced with observed sea surface temperatures (SSTs) from 1856 to 2012 to separate and quantify the influences of the tropical Pacific and internal atmospheric variability on pan-coastal droughts; all other boundary conditions are kept at climatological levels to explicitly isolate for the impacts of SST changes. Internal atmospheric variability is the dominant driver of pan-coastal droughts, accounting for 84% of their severity, and can reliably generate pan-coastal droughts even when ocean conditions do not favor drought. Cold phases of the Pacific Ocean play a secondary role and contribute, on average, only 16% to pan-coastal drought severity. Spatiotemporal analyses of precipitation and soil moisture along the U.S. Pacific coast corroborate these findings and identify an antiphased wet–dry dipole pattern induced by the Pacific to play a more secondary role. Our model framework expands on previous observational analyses that point to the spatially uniform forcing of internal atmospheric variability as the more dominant mode of hydroclimate variability along the U.S. Pacific coast. The secondary nature of oceanic forcing suggests limited predictability of pan-continental droughts.
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- 2021
14. Publisher Correction: Soil moisture–atmosphere feedbacks mitigate declining water availability in drylands
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Zhou, Sha, Williams, A Park, Lintner, Benjamin R, Berg, Alexis M, Zhang, Yao, Keenan, Trevor F, Cook, Benjamin I, Hagemann, Stefan, Seneviratne, Sonia I, and Gentine, Pierre
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Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Environmental Science and Management - Abstract
In the version of this Article originally published, the multiplication symbol was mistakenly used instead of the dot product in equations (1) and (4)–(11). This has now been corrected in the online versions of the Article.
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- 2021
15. Tree‐Ring Reconstruction of the Atmospheric Ridging Feature That Causes Flash Drought in the Central United States Since 1500
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Bolles, Kasey C, Williams, A Park, Cook, Edward R, Cook, Benjamin I, and Bishop, Daniel A
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Climate Action ,atmospheric ridging ,central U ,S ,flash drought ,singular spectrum analysis ,soil moisture ,tree‐ ,ring reconstruction ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Published
- 2021
16. Soil moisture–atmosphere feedbacks mitigate declining water availability in drylands
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Zhou, Sha, Williams, A Park, Lintner, Benjamin R, Berg, Alexis M, Zhang, Yao, Keenan, Trevor F, Cook, Benjamin I, Hagemann, Stefan, Seneviratne, Sonia I, and Gentine, Pierre
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Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Environmental Science and Management - Abstract
Global warming alters surface water availability (precipitation minus evapotranspiration, P–E) and hence freshwater resources. However, the influence of land–atmosphere feedbacks on future P–E changes and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that soil moisture (SM) strongly impacts future P–E changes, especially in drylands, by regulating evapotranspiration and atmospheric moisture inflow. Using modelling and empirical approaches, we find a consistent negative SM feedback on P–E, which may offset ~60% of the decline in dryland P–E otherwise expected in the absence of SM feedbacks. The negative feedback is not caused by atmospheric thermodynamic responses to declining SM; rather, reduced SM, in addition to limiting evapotranspiration, regulates atmospheric circulation and vertical ascent to enhance moisture transport into drylands. This SM effect is a large source of uncertainty in projected dryland P–E changes, underscoring the need to better constrain future SM changes and improve the representation of SM–atmosphere processes in models.
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- 2021
17. Divergent Regional Climate Consequences of Maintaining Current Irrigation Rates in the 21st Century
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Cook, Benjamin I, McDermid, Sonali Shukla, Puma, Michael J, Williams, A Park, Seager, Richard, Kelley, Maxwell, Nazarenko, Larissa, and Aleinov, Igor
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Climate Action ,Life on Land ,climate change ,irrigation ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience - Published
- 2020
18. Large contribution from anthropogenic warming to an emerging North American megadrought
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Williams, A Park, Cook, Edward R, Smerdon, Jason E, Cook, Benjamin I, Abatzoglou, John T, Bolles, Kasey, Baek, Seung H, Badger, Andrew M, and Livneh, Ben
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Climate Action ,Droughts ,Global Warming ,History ,21st Century ,History ,Medieval ,Human Activities ,Hydrology ,Models ,Theoretical ,North America ,Soil ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Severe and persistent 21st-century drought in southwestern North America (SWNA) motivates comparisons to medieval megadroughts and questions about the role of anthropogenic climate change. We use hydrological modeling and new 1200-year tree-ring reconstructions of summer soil moisture to demonstrate that the 2000-2018 SWNA drought was the second driest 19-year period since 800 CE, exceeded only by a late-1500s megadrought. The megadrought-like trajectory of 2000-2018 soil moisture was driven by natural variability superimposed on drying due to anthropogenic warming. Anthropogenic trends in temperature, relative humidity, and precipitation estimated from 31 climate models account for 47% (model interquartiles of 35 to 105%) of the 2000-2018 drought severity, pushing an otherwise moderate drought onto a trajectory comparable to the worst SWNA megadroughts since 800 CE.
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- 2020
19. Dynamics, variability, and change in seasonal precipitation reconstructions for North America Dynamics, variability, and change in seasonal precipitation reconstructions for North America
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Stahle, David W, Cook, Edward R, Burnette, Dorian J, Torbenson, Max CA, Howard, Ian M, Griffin, Daniel, Diaz, Jose Villanueva, Cook, Benjamin I, Williams, A Park, Watson, Emma, Sauchyn, David J, Pederson, Neil, Woodhouse, Connie A, Pederson, Gregory T, Meko, David, Coulthard, Bethany, and Crawford, Christopher J
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Earth Sciences ,Oceanography ,Climate Change Science ,Climate Action ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Geomatic Engineering ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Atmospheric sciences ,Climate change science - Abstract
Abstract: Cool- and warm-season precipitation totals have been reconstructed on a gridded basis for North America using 439 tree-ring chronologies correlated with December–April totals and 547 different chronologies correlated with May–July totals. These discrete seasonal chronologies are not significantly correlated with the alternate season; the December–April reconstructions are skillful over most of the southern and western United States and north-central Mexico, and the May–July estimates have skill over most of the United States, southwestern Canada, and northeastern Mexico. Both the strong continent-wide El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) signal embedded in the cool-season reconstructions and the Arctic Oscillation signal registered by the warm-season estimates faithfully reproduce the sign, intensity, and spatial patterns of these ocean–atmospheric influences on North American precipitation as recorded with instrumental data. The reconstructions are included in the North American Seasonal Precipitation Atlas (NASPA) and provide insight into decadal droughts and pluvials. They indicate that the sixteenth-century megadrought, the most severe and sustained North American drought of the past 500 years, was the combined result of three distinct seasonal droughts, each bearing unique spatial patterns potentially associated with seasonal forcing from ENSO, the Arctic Oscillation, and the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation. Significant 200–500-yr-long trends toward increased precipitation have been detected in the cool- and warm-season reconstructions for eastern North America. These seasonal precipitation changes appear to be part of the positive moisture trend measured in other paleoclimate proxies for the eastern area that began as a result of natural forcing before the industrial revolution and may have recently been enhanced by anthropogenic climate change.
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- 2020
20. Mid-latitude freshwater availability reduced by projected vegetation responses to climate change
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Mankin, Justin S, Seager, Richard, Smerdon, Jason E, Cook, Benjamin I, and Williams, A Park
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Climate Action ,Clean Water and Sanitation ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Published
- 2019
21. Climate variability and simultaneous breadbasket yield shocks as observed in long-term yield records
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Anderson, Weston, Baethgen, Walter, Capitanio, Fabian, Ciais, Philippe, Cook, Benjamin I., Cunha, Cunha G.R. da, Goddard, Lisa, Schauberger, Bernhard, Sonder, Kai, Podestá, Guillermo, van der Velde, Marijn, and You, Liangzhi
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- 2023
- Full Text
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22. Megadroughts in the Common Era and the Anthropocene
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Cook, Benjamin I., Smerdon, Jason E., Cook, Edward R., Williams, A. Park, Anchukaitis, Kevin J., Mankin, Justin S., Allen, Kathryn, Andreu-Hayles, Laia, Ault, Toby R., Belmecheri, Soumaya, Coats, Sloan, Coulthard, Bethany, Fosu, Boniface, Grierson, Pauline, Griffin, Daniel, Herrera, Dimitris A., Ionita, Monica, Lehner, Flavio, Leland, Caroline, Marvel, Kate, Morales, Mariano S., Mishra, Vimal, Ngoma, Justine, Nguyen, Hung T. T., O’Donnell, Alison, Palmer, Jonathan, Rao, Mukund P., Rodriguez-Caton, Milagros, Seager, Richard, Stahle, David W., Stevenson, Samantha, Thapa, Uday K., Varuolo-Clarke, Arianna M., and Wise, Erika K.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The Efficacy of Seasonal Terrestrial Water Storage Forecasts for Predicting Vegetation Activity over Africa
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Cook, Benjamin I., Slinski, Kimberly, Peters-Lidard, Christa, McNally, Amy, Arsenault, Kristi, and Hazra, Abheera
- Published
- 2021
24. Author Correction: Irrigation in the Earth system
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McDermid, Sonali, Nocco, Mallika, Lawston-Parker, Patricia, Keune, Jessica, Pokhrel, Yadu, Jain, Meha, Jägermeyr, Jonas, Brocca, Luca, Massari, Christian, Jones, Andrew D., Vahmani, Pouya, Thiery, Wim, Yao, Yi, Bell, Andrew, Chen, Liang, Dorigo, Wouter, Hanasaki, Naota, Jasechko, Scott, Lo, Min-Hui, Mahmood, Rezaul, Mishra, Vimal, Mueller, Nathaniel D., Niyogi, Dev, Rabin, Sam S., Sloat, Lindsey, Wada, Yoshihide, Zappa, Luca, Chen, Fei, Cook, Benjamin I., Kim, Hyungjun, Lombardozzi, Danica, Polcher, Jan, Ryu, Dongryeol, Santanello, Joe, Satoh, Yusuke, Seneviratne, Sonia, Singh, Deepti, and Yokohata, Tokuta
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Land–atmosphere feedbacks exacerbate concurrent soil drought and atmospheric aridity
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Zhou, Sha, Williams, A Park, Berg, Alexis M, Cook, Benjamin I, Zhang, Yao, Hagemann, Stefan, Lorenz, Ruth, Seneviratne, Sonia I, and Gentine, Pierre
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Earth Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Ecology ,Biological Sciences ,Atmosphere ,Climate Change ,Droughts ,Feedback ,Geographic Mapping ,Humidity ,Models ,Theoretical ,Soil ,Weather ,soil moisture ,vapor pressure deficit ,compound extreme events ,GLACE-CMIP5 - Abstract
Compound extremes such as cooccurring soil drought (low soil moisture) and atmospheric aridity (high vapor pressure deficit) can be disastrous for natural and societal systems. Soil drought and atmospheric aridity are 2 main physiological stressors driving widespread vegetation mortality and reduced terrestrial carbon uptake. Here, we empirically demonstrate that strong negative coupling between soil moisture and vapor pressure deficit occurs globally, indicating high probability of cooccurring soil drought and atmospheric aridity. Using the Global Land Atmosphere Coupling Experiment (GLACE)-CMIP5 experiment, we further show that concurrent soil drought and atmospheric aridity are greatly exacerbated by land-atmosphere feedbacks. The feedback of soil drought on the atmosphere is largely responsible for enabling atmospheric aridity extremes. In addition, the soil moisture-precipitation feedback acts to amplify precipitation and soil moisture deficits in most regions. CMIP5 models further show that the frequency of concurrent soil drought and atmospheric aridity enhanced by land-atmosphere feedbacks is projected to increase in the 21st century. Importantly, land-atmosphere feedbacks will greatly increase the intensity of both soil drought and atmospheric aridity beyond that expected from changes in mean climate alone.
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- 2019
26. Climate Change Amplification of Natural Drought Variability: The Historic Mid-Twentieth Century North American Drought In a Warmer World Climate Change Amplification of Natural Drought Variability: The Historic Mid-Twentieth Century North American Drought In a Warmer World
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Cook, Benjamin I, Seager, Richard, Williams, A Park, Puma, Michael J, McDermid, Sonali, Kelley, Maxwell, and Nazarenko, Larissa
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Climate Action ,North America ,Drought ,Climate change ,Climate models ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Oceanography ,Geomatic Engineering ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
AbstractIn the mid-twentieth century (1948–57), North America experienced a severe drought forced by cold tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs). If these SSTs recurred, it would likely cause another drought, but in a world substantially warmer than the one in which the original event took place. We use a 20-member ensemble of the GISS climate model to investigate the drought impacts of a repetition of the mid-twentieth-century SST anomalies in a significantly warmer world. Using observed SSTs and mid-twentieth-century forcings (Hist-DRGHT), the ensemble reproduces the observed precipitation deficits during the cold season (October–March) across the Southwest, southern plains, and Mexico and during the warm season (April–September) in the southern plains and the Southeast. Under analogous SST forcing and enhanced warming (Fut-DRGHT, ≈3 K above preindustrial), cold season precipitation deficits are ameliorated in the Southwest and southern plains and intensified in the Southeast, whereas during the warm season precipitation deficits are enhanced across North America. This occurs primarily from greenhouse gas–forced trends in mean precipitation, rather than changes in SST teleconnections. Cold season runoff deficits in Fut-DRGHT are significantly amplified over the Southeast, but otherwise similar to Hist-DRGHT over the Southwest and southern plains. In the warm season, however, runoff and soil moisture deficits during Fut-DRGHT are significantly amplified across the southern United States, a consequence of enhanced precipitation deficits and increased evaporative losses due to warming. Our study highlights how internal variability and greenhouse gas–forced trends in hydroclimate are likely to interact over North America, including how changes in both precipitation and evaporative demand will affect future drought.
- Published
- 2019
27. Oceanic and radiative forcing of medieval megadroughts in the American Southwest
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Steiger, Nathan J, Smerdon, Jason E, Cook, Benjamin I, Seager, Richard, Williams, A Park, and Cook, Edward R
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Earth Sciences ,Oceanography - Abstract
Multidecadal "megadroughts" were a notable feature of the climate of the American Southwest over the Common era, yet we still lack a comprehensive theory for what caused these megadroughts and why they curiously only occurred before about 1600 CE. Here, we use the Paleo Hydrodynamics Data Assimilation product, in conjunction with radiative forcing estimates, to demonstrate that megadroughts in the American Southwest were driven by unusually frequent and cold central tropical Pacific sea surface temperature (SST) excursions in conjunction with anomalously warm Atlantic SSTs and a locally positive radiative forcing. This assessment of past megadroughts provides the first comprehensive theory for the causes of megadroughts and their clustering particularly during the Medieval era. This work also provides the first paleoclimatic support for the prediction that the risk of American Southwest megadroughts will markedly increase with global warming.
- Published
- 2019
28. Dynamics and variability of the spring dry season in the United States Southwest as observed in AmeriFlux and NLDAS-2 data Dynamics and variability of the spring dry season in the United States Southwest as observed in AmeriFlux and NLDAS-2 data
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Pascolini-Campbell, Madeleine, Seager, Richard, Williams, A Park, Cook, Benjamin I, and Pinson, Ariane O
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Climate Action ,North America ,Climate records ,Land surface model ,Climate variability ,Spring season ,Ecosystem effects ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
Abstract The spring dry season occurring in an arid region of the southwestern United States, which receives both winter storm track and summer monsoon precipitation, is investigated. Bimodal precipitation and vegetation growth provide an opportunity to assess multiple climate mechanisms and their impact on hydroclimate and ecosystems. We detect multiple shifts from wet to drier conditions in the observational record and land surface model output. Focusing on the recent dry period, a shift in the late 1990s resulted in earlier and greater spring soil moisture draw down, and later and reduced spring vegetation green-up, compared to a prior wet period (1979–97). A simple soil moisture balance model shows this shift is driven by changes in winter precipitation. The recent post-1999 dry period and an earlier one from 1948 to 1966 are both related to the cool tropics phase of Pacific decadal variability, which influences winter precipitation. In agreement with other studies for the southwestern United States, we find the recent drought cannot be explained in terms of precipitation alone, but also is due to the rising influence of temperature, thus highlighting the sensitivity of this region to warming temperatures. Future changes in the spring dry season will therefore be affected by how tropical decadal variability evolves, and also by emerging trends due to human-driven warming.
- Published
- 2019
29. Twentieth-century hydroclimate changes consistent with human influence
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Marvel, Kate, Cook, Benjamin I, Bonfils, Céline JW, Durack, Paul J, Smerdon, Jason E, and Williams, A Park
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Climate Action ,Aerosols ,Climate Change ,Droughts ,History ,20th Century ,History ,21st Century ,Human Activities ,Hydrology ,Models ,Theoretical ,Plants ,Principal Component Analysis ,Water ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Although anthropogenic climate change is expected to have caused large shifts in temperature and rainfall, the detection of human influence on global drought has been complicated by large internal variability and the brevity of observational records. Here we address these challenges using reconstructions of the Palmer drought severity index obtained with data from tree rings that span the past millennium. We show that three distinct periods are identifiable in climate models, observations and reconstructions during the twentieth century. In recent decades (1981 to present), the signal of greenhouse gas forcing is present but not yet detectable at high confidence. Observations and reconstructions differ significantly from an expected pattern of greenhouse gas forcing around mid-century (1950-1975), coinciding with a global increase in aerosol forcing. In the first half of the century (1900-1949), however, a signal of greenhouse-gas-forced change is robustly detectable. Multiple observational datasets and reconstructions using data from tree rings confirm that human activities were probably affecting the worldwide risk of droughts as early as the beginning of the twentieth century.
- Published
- 2019
30. Pacific Ocean Forcing and Atmospheric Variability Are the Dominant Causes of Spatially Widespread Droughts in the Contiguous United States
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Baek, Seung H, Smerdon, Jason E, Seager, Richard, Williams, A Park, and Cook, Benjamin I
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Climate Action ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience - Published
- 2019
31. 20,000 years of societal vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in southwest Asia
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Jones, Matthew D, Abu‐Jaber, Nizar, AlShdaifat, Ahmad, Baird, Douglas, Cook, Benjamin I, Cuthbert, Mark O, Dean, Jonathan R, Djamali, Morteza, Eastwood, Warren, Fleitmann, Dominik, Haywood, Alan, Kwiecien, Ola, Larsen, Joshua, Maher, Lisa A, Metcalfe, Sarah E, Parker, Adrian, Petrie, Cameron A, Primmer, Nick, Richter, Tobias, Roberts, Neil, Roe, Joe, Tindall, Julia C, Ünal‐İmer, Ezgi, and Weeks, Lloyd
- Subjects
Earth Sciences ,Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Environmental Sciences ,Climate Action ,archaeology ,Holocene ,hydrology ,Iran ,Levant ,palaeoclimate ,Turkey - Abstract
The Fertile Crescent, its hilly flanks and surrounding drylands has been a critical region for studying how climate has influenced societal change, and this review focuses on the region over the last 20,000 years. The complex social, economic, and environmental landscapes in the region today are not new phenomena and understanding their interactions requires a nuanced, multidisciplinary understanding of the past. This review builds on a history of collaboration between the social and natural palaeoscience disciplines. We provide a multidisciplinary, multiscalar perspective on the relevance of past climate, environmental, and archaeological research in assessing present day vulnerabilities and risks for the populations of southwest Asia. We discuss the complexity of palaeoclimatic data interpretation, particularly in relation to hydrology, and provide an overview of key time periods of palaeoclimatic interest. We discuss the critical role that vegetation plays in the human-climate-environment nexus and discuss the implications of the available palaeoclimate and archaeological data, and their interpretation, for palaeonarratives of the region, both climatically and socially. We also provide an overview of how modelling can improve our understanding of past climate impacts and associated change in risk to societies. We conclude by looking to future work, and identify themes of "scale" and "seasonality" as still requiring further focus. We suggest that by appreciating a given locale's place in the regional hydroscape, be it an archaeological site or palaeoenvironmental archive, more robust links to climate can be made where appropriate and interpretations drawn will demand the resolution of factors acting across multiple scales. This article is categorized under:Human Water > Water as Imagined and RepresentedScience of Water > Water and Environmental ChangeWater and Life > Nature of Freshwater Ecosystems.
- Published
- 2019
32. New directions in tropical phenology
- Author
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Davis, Charles C., Lyra, Goia M., Park, Daniel S., Asprino, Renata, Maruyama, Rogério, Torquato, Débora, Cook, Benjamin I., and Ellison, Aaron M.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Changing hydroclimate dynamics and the 19th to 20th century wetting trend in the English Channel region of northwest Europe
- Author
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Scholz, Serena R., Seager, Richard, Ting, Mingfang, Kushnir, Yochanan, Smerdon, Jason E., Cook, Benjamin I., Cook, Edward R., and Baek, Seung Hun
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The Impact of Drought on Terrestrial Carbon in the West African Sahel: Implications for Natural Climate Solutions.
- Author
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Rigatti, Emma, McDermid, Sonali S., Cook, Benjamin I., and De Kauwe, Martin G.
- Abstract
Terrestrial ecosystems store more than twice the carbon of the atmosphere, and are critical to climate change mitigation efforts. This has led to a proliferation of land‐based carbon sequestration efforts, such as re/afforestation associated with the Great Green Wall in the West African Sahel (WAS GGW). However, we currently lack comprehensive assessments of the long‐term viability of these ecosystems' carbon storage in the context of increasingly severe climate extremes. The WAS is particularly prone to recurrent and disruptive extremes, exemplified by the persistent and severe late‐20th century drought. We assessed the response and recovery of WAS GGW carbon stocks and fluxes to this late‐20th century drought, and the subsequent rainfall recovery, by leveraging a suite of terrestrial ecosystem models. While multi‐model mean carbon fluxes (e.g., gross primary production, respiration) partly recovered to pre‐drought levels, modeled total (above and below ground) ecosystem carbon stock falls to as much as two standard deviations below pre‐drought levels and does not recover even ∼20 years after the maximum drought anomaly. Furthermore, to the extent that the modeled regional carbon stock recovers, it is nearly entirely driven by atmospheric CO2 trends rather than the precipitation recovery. Uncertainties in regional ecosystem carbon simulation are high, as the models' carbon responses to drought displayed a nearly 10‐standard deviation spread. Nevertheless, the multi‐model average response highlights the strong and persistent impact of drought on terrestrial carbon storage, and the potential risks of relying on terrestrial ecosystems as a "natural climate solution" for climate change mitigation. Plain Language Summary: Land‐based ecosystems store twice as much carbon as the atmosphere, and are important to protect and restore to address climate change. The West African Sahel (WAS) has been identified as an important region for ecosystem restoration partly to help advance climate change mitigation efforts, for example, as part of the Great Green Wall (GGW). However, increasingly‐severe climate extremes, such as drought, can adversely impact ecosystem carbon storage and recovery. To better understand these drought impacts, we use a suite of terrestrial ecosystem models to evaluate the West African Sahel ecosystem carbon response to the late 20th century drought and following rainfall recovery. The multi‐model average shows that the drought substantially reduced the total amount of carbon stored in the WAS GGW vegetation and soils, which do not fully recover even 20 years after the peak drought period. The models do, however, vary widely in their carbon responses to the prolonged drought, owing to major uncertainties in both process and regional ecosystem representation. There are many benefits of restoring ecosystems, particularly in drought‐prone regions. Nevertheless, our study demonstrates that prolonged drought can strongly influence and potentially compromise the WAS ecosystem's carbon storage capacity, therefore possibly limiting the efficacy of the WAS GGW to serve as "natural climate solutions" specifically toward climate change mitigation goals. Key Points: Ecosystem models show that the 20th century Sahelian drought depressed carbon stocks across the West African Great Green Wall domainCarbon fluxes did exhibit some recovery strongly driven atmospheric CO2 trends and plant physiological effectsDrought events could limit long‐term terrestrial carbon storage across the West African Great Green Wall domain [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. SI Correction
- Author
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Morales-Castilla, Ignacio, de Cortázar-Atauri, In˜aki García, Cook, Benjamin I., Lacombe, Thierry, Parker, Amber, van Leeuwen, Cornelis, Nicholas, Kimberly A., and Wolkovich, Elizabeth M.
- Published
- 2020
36. Cold Tropical Pacific Sea Surface Temperatures During the Late Sixteenth‐Century North American Megadrought
- Author
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Cook, Benjamin I, Williams, A Park, Smerdon, Jason E, Palmer, Jonathan G, Cook, Edward R, Stahle, David W, and Coats, Sloan
- Subjects
Climate Action ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience - Published
- 2018
37. Exacerbation of the 2013–2016 Pan‐Caribbean Drought by Anthropogenic Warming
- Author
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Herrera, Dimitris A, Ault, Toby R, Fasullo, John T, Coats, Sloan J, Carrillo, Carlos M, Cook, Benjamin I, and Williams, A Park
- Subjects
Climate Action ,Caribbean ,anthropogenic warming ,drought ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
The Caribbean islands are expected to see more frequent and severe droughts from reduced precipitation and increased evaporative demand due to anthropogenic climate change. Between 2013 and 2016, the Caribbean experienced a widespread drought due in part to El Niño in 2015-2016, but it is unknown whether its severity was exacerbated by anthropogenic warming. This work examines the role of recent warming on this drought, using a recently developed high-resolution self-calibrating Palmer Drought Severity Index data set. The resulting analysis suggest that anthropogenic warming accounted for ~15-17% of the drought's severity and ~7% of its spatial extent. These findings strongly suggest that climate model projected anthropogenic drying in the Caribbean is already underway, with major implications for the more than 43 million people currently living in this region.
- Published
- 2018
38. Blue Water Trade‐Offs With Vegetation in a CO2‐Enriched Climate
- Author
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Mankin, Justin S, Seager, Richard, Smerdon, Jason E, Cook, Benjamin I, Williams, A Park, and Horton, Radley M
- Subjects
Life on Land ,Climate Action ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Published
- 2018
39. Investigating the causes of increased 20th-century fall precipitation over the southeastern United States.
- Author
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Bishop, Daniel A, Williams, A Park, Seager, Richard, Fiore, Arlene M, Cook, Benjamin I, Mankin, Justin S, Singh, Deepti, Smerdon, Jason E, and Rao, Mukund P
- Subjects
drought ,hydroclimate ,moisture transport ,pluvial ,subtropical High ,North America ,Atmospheric circulation ,Forcing ,Mass fluxes ,transport ,Precipitation ,Climate variability ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Oceanography ,Geomatic Engineering ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
Much of the eastern United States (US) experienced increased precipitation over the 20th century. Characterizing these trends and their causes is critical for assessing future hydroclimate risks. Here, US precipitation trends are analyzed during 1895-2016, revealing that fall precipitation in the southeastern region north of the Gulf of Mexico (SE-Gulf) increased by nearly 40%, primarily increasing after the mid-1900s. As fall is the climatological dry season in the SE-Gulf and precipitation in other seasons changed insignificantly, the seasonal precipitation cycle diminished substantially. The increase in SE-Gulf fall precipitation was caused by increased southerly moisture transport from the Gulf of Mexico, which was almost entirely driven by stronger winds associated with enhanced anticyclonic circulation west of the North Atlantic Subtropical High (NASH) and not by increases in specific humidity. Atmospheric models forced by observed SSTs and fully-coupled models forced by historical anthropogenic forcing do not robustly simulate 20th-century fall wetting in the SE-Gulf. SST-forced atmospheric models do simulate an intensified anticyclonic low-level circulation around the NASH, but the modeled intensification occurred farther west than observed. CMIP5 analyses suggest an increased likelihood of positive SE-Gulf fall precipitation trends given historical and future GHG forcing. Nevertheless, individual model simulations (both SST-forced and fully-coupled) only very rarely produce the observed magnitude of the SE-Gulf fall precipitation trend. Further research into model representation of the western ridge of the fall NASH is needed, which will help us better predict whether 20th-century increases in SE-Gulf fall precipitation will persist into the future.
- Published
- 2018
40. Revisiting the Leading Drivers of Pacific Coastal Drought Variability in the Contiguous United States
- Author
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Cook, Benjamin I, Williams, A Park, Mankin, Justin S, Seager, Richard, Smerdon, Jason E, and Singh, Deepti
- Subjects
Atmospheric Sciences ,Oceanography ,Geomatic Engineering ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
Abstract Coastal droughts that simultaneously affect California, Oregon, and Washington are rare, but they have extensive and severe impacts (e.g., wildfire and agriculture). To better understand these events, historical observations are used to investigate 1) drought variability along the Pacific coast of the contiguous United States and 2) years when extreme drought affects the entire coast. The leading pattern of cold-season (October–March) precipitation variability along the Pacific coast favors spatially coherent moisture anomalies, accounting for >40% of the underlying variance, and is forced primarily by internal atmospheric dynamics. This contrasts with a much weaker dipole mode (~20% of precipitation variability) characterized by antiphased moisture anomalies across 40°N and strong correlations with tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs). Sixteen coastal-wide summer droughts occurred from 1895 to 2016 (clustering in the 1920s–1930s and post-2000), events most strongly linked with the leading precipitation mode and internal atmospheric variability. The frequency of landfalling atmospheric rivers south of 40°N is sharply reduced during coastal droughts but not north of this boundary, where their frequency is more strongly influenced by the dipole. The lack of a consistent pattern of SST forcing during coastal droughts suggests little potential for skillful seasonal predictions. However, their tendency to cluster in time and the impact of warming during recent droughts may help inform decadal and longer-term drought risks.
- Published
- 2018
41. The Changing Influence of Precipitation on Soil Moisture Drought With Warming in the Mediterranean and Western North America
- Author
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Nielsen, Miriam, primary, Cook, Benjamin I., additional, Marvel, Kate, additional, Ting, Mingfang, additional, and Smerdon, Jason E., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Global Warming Is Likely Affecting Regional Drought across Eurasia
- Author
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Marvel, Kate, primary, Cook, Benjamin I, additional, and Cook, Edward R, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Dendroarchaeological analysis of the Terminal Warehouse in New York City reveals a history of long-distance timber transport during the Gilded Age
- Author
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Leland, Caroline, Rao, Mukund Palat, Cook, Edward R., Cook, Benjamin I., Lapidus, Bryan M., Staniforth, Andrew B., Solomon, Alan, Holloway, Marguerite Y., and Rodriguez-Caton, Milagros
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Diversity buffers winegrowing regions from climate change losses
- Author
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Morales-Castilla, Ignacio, de Cortázar-Atauri, Iñaki García, Cook, Benjamin I., Lacombe, Thierry, Parker, Amber, van Leeuwen, Cornelis, Nicholas, Kimberly A., and Wolkovich, Elizabeth M.
- Published
- 2020
45. The curious case of projected 21st-century drying but greening in the American West
- Author
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Mankin, Justin S, Smerdon, Jason E, Cook, Benjamin I, Williams, A Park, and Seager, Richard
- Subjects
Earth Sciences ,Oceanography ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Climate Change Science ,Climate Action ,Geomatic Engineering ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Atmospheric sciences ,Climate change science - Abstract
Climate models project significant twenty-first-century declines in water availability over the American West from anthropogenic warming. However, the physical mechanisms underpinning this response are poorly characterized, as are the uncertainties from vegetation's modulation of evaporative losses. To understand the drivers and uncertainties of future hydroclimate in the American West, a 35-member single model ensemble is used to examine the response of summer soil moisture and runoff to anthropogenic forcing. Widespread dry season soil moisture declines occur across the region despite increases in total water-year precipitation and ubiquitous increases in plant water-use efficiency. These modeled soil moisture declines are initially forced by significant snowpack losses that directly diminish summer soil water, even in regions where water-year precipitation increases. When snowpack priming is coupled with a warming- and CO2-induced shift in phenology and increased primary production, widespread increases in leaf area further reduces summer soil moisture and runoff by outpacing decreased stomatal conductance from high CO2. The net effects lead to the cooccurrence of both a "greener" and "drier" future across the western United States. Because simulated vegetation exerts a large influence on predicted changes in water availability in the American West, these findings highlight the importance of reducing the substantial uncertainties in the ecological processes increasingly incorporated into numerical Earth system models.
- Published
- 2017
46. The 2016 Southeastern U.S. Drought: An Extreme Departure From Centennial Wetting and Cooling
- Author
-
Williams, A Park, Cook, Benjamin I, Smerdon, Jason E, Bishop, Daniel A, Seager, Richard, and Mankin, Justin S
- Subjects
Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience - Abstract
The fall 2016 drought in the southeastern United States (SE US) appeared exceptional based on its widespread impacts, but the current monitoring framework that only extends from 1979-present does not readily facilitate evaluation of soil-moisture anomalies in a centennial context. A new method to extend monthly gridded soil-moisture estimates back to 1895 is developed, indicating that since 1895, October-November 2016 soil moisture (0-200 cm) in the SE US was likely the second lowest on record, behind 1954. This severe drought developed rapidly and was brought on by low September-November precipitation and record-high September-November daily maximum temperatures (Tmax). Record Tmax drove record-high atmospheric moisture demand, accounting for 28% of the October-November 2016 soil-moisture anomaly. Drought and heat in fall 2016 contrasted with 20th-century wetting and cooling in the region, but resembled conditions more common from 1895-1956. Dynamically, the exceptional drying in fall 2016 was driven by anomalous ridging over the central United States that reduced south-southwesterly moisture transports into the SE US by approximately 75%. These circulation anomalies were likely promoted by a moderate La Niña and warmth in the tropical Atlantic, but these processes accounted for very little of the SE US drying in fall 2016, implying a large role for internal atmospheric variability. The extended analysis back to 1895 indicates that SE US droughts as strong as the 2016 event are more likely than indicated from a shorter 60-year perspective, and continued multi-decadal swings in precipitation may combine with future warming to further enhance the likelihood of such events.
- Published
- 2017
47. Precipitation, Temperature, and Teleconnection Signals across the Combined North American, Monsoon Asia, and Old World Drought Atlases
- Author
-
Baek, Seung H, Smerdon, Jason E, Coats, Sloan, Williams, A Park, Cook, Benjamin I, Cook, Edward R, and Seager, Richard
- Subjects
Mental Health ,Climate Action ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Oceanography ,Geomatic Engineering ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
The tree-ring-based North American Drought Atlas (NADA), Monsoon Asia Drought Atlas (MADA), and Old World Drought Atlas (OWDA) collectively yield a near-hemispheric gridded reconstruction of hydroclimate variability over the last millennium. To test the robustness of the large-scale representation of hydroclimate variability across the drought atlases, the joint expression of seasonal climate variability and teleconnections in the NADA, MADA, and OWDA are compared against two global, observation-based PDSI products. Predominantly positive (negative) correlations are determined between seasonal precipitation (surface air temperature) and collocated tree-ring-based PDSI, with average Pearson's correlation coefficients increasing in magnitude from boreal winter to summer. For precipitation, these correlations tend to be stronger in the boreal winter and summer when calculated for the observed PDSI record, while remaining similar for temperature. Notwithstanding these differences, the drought atlases robustly express teleconnection patterns associated with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), and Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO). These expressions exist in the drought atlas estimates of boreal summer PDSI despite the fact that these modes of climate variability are dominant in boreal winter, with the exception of the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation. ENSO and NAO teleconnection patterns in the drought atlases are particularly consistent with their well-known dominant expressions in boreal winter and over the OWDA domain, respectively. Collectively, our findings confirm that the joint Northern Hemisphere drought atlases robustly reflect large-scale patterns of hydroclimate variability on seasonal to multidecadal timescales over the 20th century and are likely to provide similarly robust estimates of hydroclimate variability prior to the existence of widespread instrumental data.
- Published
- 2017
48. Western Pacific hydroclimate linked to global climate variability over the past two millennia.
- Author
-
Griffiths, Michael L, Kimbrough, Alena K, Gagan, Michael K, Drysdale, Russell N, Cole, Julia E, Johnson, Kathleen R, Zhao, Jian-Xin, Cook, Benjamin I, Hellstrom, John C, and Hantoro, Wahyoe S
- Abstract
Interdecadal modes of tropical Pacific ocean-atmosphere circulation have a strong influence on global temperature, yet the extent to which these phenomena influence global climate on multicentury timescales is still poorly known. Here we present a 2,000-year, multiproxy reconstruction of western Pacific hydroclimate from two speleothem records for southeastern Indonesia. The composite record shows pronounced shifts in monsoon rainfall that are antiphased with precipitation records for East Asia and the central-eastern equatorial Pacific. These meridional and zonal patterns are best explained by a poleward expansion of the Australasian Intertropical Convergence Zone and weakening of the Pacific Walker circulation (PWC) between ∼1000 and 1500 CE Conversely, an equatorward contraction of the Intertropical Convergence Zone and strengthened PWC occurred between ∼1500 and 1900 CE. Our findings, together with climate model simulations, highlight the likelihood that century-scale variations in tropical Pacific climate modes can significantly modulate radiatively forced shifts in global temperature.
- Published
- 2016
49. North American megadroughts in the Common Era: reconstructions and simulations
- Author
-
Cook, Benjamin I, Cook, Edward R, Smerdon, Jason E, Seager, Richard, Williams, A Park, Coats, Sloan, Stahle, David W, and Díaz, José Villanueva
- Subjects
Climate Action - Published
- 2016
50. The plant phenology monitoring design for The National Ecological Observatory Network
- Author
-
Elmendorf, Sarah C, Jones, Katherine D, Cook, Benjamin I, Diez, Jeffrey M, Enquist, Carolyn AF, Hufft, Rebecca A, Jones, Matthew O, Mazer, Susan J, Miller‐Rushing, Abraham J, Moore, David JP, Schwartz, Mark D, and Weltzin, Jake F
- Subjects
Climate Action ,long-term monitoring ,NEON ,open-source data ,plant phenology ,sample design ,Special Feature: NEON Design ,Ecological Applications ,Ecology ,Zoology - Abstract
Phenology is an integrative science that comprises the study of recurring biological activities or events. In an era of rapidly changing climate, the relationship between the timing of those events and environmental cues such as temperature, snowmelt, water availability, or day length are of particular interest. This article provides an overview of the observer-based plant phenology sampling conducted by the U.S. National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON), the resulting data, and the rationale behind the design. Trained technicians will conduct regular in situ observations of plant phenology at all terrestrial NEON sites for the 30-yr life of the observatory. Standardized and coordinated data across the network of sites can be used to quantify the direction and magnitude of the relationships between phenology and environmental forcings, as well as the degree to which these relationships vary among sites, among species, among phenophases, and through time. Vegetation at NEON sites will also be monitored with tower-based cameras, satellite remote sensing, and annual high-resolution airborne remote sensing. Ground-based measurements can be used to calibrate and improve satellite-derived phenometrics. NEON's phenology monitoring design is complementary to existing phenology research efforts and citizen science initiatives throughout the world and will produce interoperable data. By collocating plant phenology observations with a suite of additional meteorological, biophysical, and ecological measurements (e.g., climate, carbon flux, plant productivity, population dynamics of consumers) at 47 terrestrial sites, the NEON design will enable continental-scale inference about the status, trends, causes, and ecological consequences of phenological change.
- Published
- 2016
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