Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




Irrigation may not cool the globe in the future

TheAllINeed.com
(NC&T/LLNL) "Globally we derive 40 percent of our food from irrigated regions, so we'd like to be able to model future climate changes in these regions," said Celine Bonfils, lead author of the study from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and U.C. Merced.

Based on observations of temperature and irrigation trends throughout the state, the authors demonstrated a clear irrigation-induced cooling in agricultural areas, and showed that this effect has recently slowed down.

"This is not a model result, but something very clearly evident in the data. We also looked at other major irrigated regions in the world, and saw a very similar pattern" Bonfils said.

The team, which included Bonfils and David Lobell at Livermore Lab, first studied the net impact of widespread irrigation on local and regional climate in California, the top irrigating state in the United States (3.3 million hectares). In highly irrigated regions of the San Joaquin Valley, daytime temperatures relative to low irrigated areas have cooled by 1.8 degrees - 3.2 degrees C since the introduction of irrigation practice in 1887.

"In comparison, there was no clear effect of irrigation on temperatures over the 1980-2000 period when there was no net growth of irrigation," Lobell said.

Global map of the fraction of each 5' x 5' grid cell equipped from irrigation (Photo: LLNL)
Irrigation cools the surface of the earth by increasing the amount of energy used to evaporate water rather than heat the land. The more irrigated the land, the more intense the effect. "It was quite surprising how well we could distinguish a cooling trend that incrementally increases with the amount of irrigation," Bonfils said.

This study also shows that the rapid summer nighttime warming, well observed in Central California since 1915, cannot be explained by irrigation expansion, as outside research has implied. "Our results show that the expansion of irrigation has almost no effect on minimum temperatures and that irrigation cannot be blamed for this rapid warming," Bonfils said.

"An increase in greenhouse gases and urbanization would best explain this trend, which exceeds what is possible from natural climate variability alone," Lobell said.

In other areas of the world where irrigation development has been rapid, including Thailand, the Aral Sea Basin and Nebraska (the second most irrigated state in the United States), the research team found the same cooling effect in summer daytime maximum temperatures. In India, Pakistan and Eastern China, the temperature change due to irrigation is a little less clear because of the presence of aerosols in the atmosphere that also contribute to the observed cooling by reflecting or absorbing sunlight.

In California, irrigation expansion is likely to end because of urbanization and water demand increase. In the United States, irrigation has for the first time decreased by 2 percent from 1998-2003 and growth in irrigation has already slowed down in many parts of the world.

"Throughout the major irrigated regions of the world, the cooling influence of irrigation on daytime maximum temperatures will be much smaller in the next 50 years than in the past century, and will likely not continue to curb the effects of greenhouse warming anymore," Bonfils said.


About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

More articles
Carbon dioxide 'tree banking'
Ancient microbes life
Spewing speed along
Experimental ecosystem
Lost forest species
Comet exploded 13,000 years ago
Irrigation globe future
Changes at the earth's core
Earth's plates
Organisms in canadian mine
Prehistoric high
Climate change goes underground
Nasty bacteria need sunlight
toxic air pollution urban parking garages
Earths proximity to sun ice age trigger
Coastal water quality
Volcanoes oxygen atmosphere
Gorillas critically endangered
northern hemisphere ice
Atmospheric moisture
Quotes
Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.
Albert Einstein.

Anything that happens enough times to irritate you will happen at least once more.
Tom Parkins Continuum.

Anns my sister, said Andy raggedly.-John Foster

Another 7 days has gone by.
mused Tom weakly.


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Secretary-General welcomes 'historic' election of Lebanese President
United Nations Secretary-General today congratulated the Lebanese people on the election of President Michel Suleimane, ending the deadlock that has endured in the Middle Eastern nation since last November.
What's your favorite fast food?
Hamburger
Fried chicken
Macaronni
Pizza
Hot dogs
Other
 
Things to ponder
If one synchronized swimmer drowns, do the rest have to drown too?

Did you know...
A regular hen's egg has about 7,000 tiny pores in its shell.

Quote of the day
Never give a party if you will be the most interesting person there.
Mickey Friedman

Featured article
Have a dog and a clean house... Yes it's possible!
It's no secret. We love dogs. In fact, according to the American Pet Products Manufacturers Association, more than 40 million American households share their lives with more than 68 million dogs.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur