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A terrifying scientific discovery: Drought is rising in Europe

By: Get News
A new study from the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague (CZU), Faculty of Environmental Sciences, found that the rise of compound warm-season droughts in Europe is a dynamic, developing phenomenon.

Prague, Czech Republic – August 11, 2021 – Drought is one of the main threats to food security and ecosystem productivity. During the past decades, Europe has experienced a series of droughts that caused substantial socioeconomic losses and environmental impacts. The scientists from CZU asked a key research question: whether there are some similar characteristics in these droughts, especially when compared to the droughts that occurred further in the past. Answering this question is impossible with traditional single-index approaches and also short-term and often spatially inconsistent records.

Decadal changes of compound warm season events.

Scientists have used a multidimensional machine learning-based clustering algorithm and the hydrologic reconstruction of European drought. They determine the dominant drought types and investigate the changes in drought typology. They report a substantial increase in shorter warm-season droughts that are concurrent with an increase in potential evapotranspiration. If shifts said here persist, “then we will need new adaptive water management policies and, in the long run, we may observe considerable alterations in vegetation regimes and ecosystem functioning,” says principal researcher Dr. Yannis Markonis. 

Researchers say further that the rise of compound warm-season droughts in Europe is a dynamic, developing phenomenon. It has already affected ecosystem functioning and economic growth. A question that remains to be answered is whether this type of drought event will persist and become a common feature of European hydroclimate. The current trends in hydrological variables derived by scientists’ analysis support that this should be anticipated to occur. In this case, compound warm-season droughts will further increase agricultural water demand, affect vegetation, and enhance the probability of firestorms. 

But, the complexity of the drought phenomenon should neither be underestimated nor be oversimplified. Long-term hydrological modeling coupled with data-driven classification provides a promising framework that comes with certain limitations and assumptions. Despite the constraints, the emerging pattern presented in their study is a crucial first step in understanding how the drought has changed in the past decades and in establishing new adaptive water management policies to mitigate the risks of future hydroclimatic hazards. 

(Yannis Markonis, Associate Professor at Czech University of Life Sciences)

See more in an original research article The rise of compound warm-season droughts in Europe published in Science Advances (the text is based on the research text). 

The Faculty of Environmental Sciences in Prague is divided into six departments that cover the whole field of education and science. According to the Bologna Declaration, the Faculty fully implements a three-tier system of studies and combines an ecological and landscape section within itself.

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Country: Czech Republic
Website: https://www.fzp.czu.cz/en

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