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Diagnostic classification of flash drought events reveals distinct classes of forcings and impactsRecent years have seen growing appreciation that rapidly intensifying flash droughts are significant climate hazards with major economic and ecological impacts. This has motivated efforts to inventory, monitor, and forecast flash drought events. Here we consider the question of whether the term “flash drought” comprises multiple distinct classes of event, which would imply that understanding and forecasting flash droughts might require more than one framework. To do this, we first extend and evaluate a soil moisture volatility–based flash drought definition that we introduced in previous work and use it to inventory the onset dates and severity of flash droughts across the contiguous United States (CONUS) for the period 1979–2018. Using this inventory, we examine meteorological and land surface conditions associated with flash drought onset and recovery. These same meteorological and land surface conditions are then used to classify the flash droughts based on precursor conditions that may represent predictable drivers of the event. We find that distinct classes of flash drought can be diagnosed in the event inventory. Specifically, we describe three classes of flash drought: “dry and demanding” events for which antecedent evaporative demand is high and soil moisture is low, “evaporative” events with more modest antecedent evaporative demand and soil moisture anomalies, but positive antecedent evaporative anomalies, and “stealth” flash droughts, which are different from the other two classes in that precursor meteorological anomalies are modest relative to the other classes. The three classes exhibit somewhat different geographic and seasonal distributions. We conclude that soil moisture flash droughts are indeed a composite of distinct types of rapidly intensifying droughts, and that flash drought analyses and forecasts would benefit from approaches that recognize the existence of multiple phenomenological pathways.
Document ID
20220014927
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)
Authors
Mahmoud Osman ORCID
(Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
Benjamin F. Zaitchik
(Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
Hamada S. Badr
(Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
Jason Otkin
(University of Wisconsin–Madison Madison, Wisconsin, United States)
Yafang Zhong
(University of Wisconsin–Madison Madison, Wisconsin, United States)
David Lorenz
(University of Wisconsin–Madison Madison, Wisconsin, United States)
Martha Anderson ORCID
(United States Department of Agriculture Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
Trevor F. Keenan
(University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, United States)
David L. Miller
(University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, United States)
Christopher Hain
(Marshall Space Flight Center Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, United States)
Thomas Holmes
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
October 3, 2022
Publication Date
February 1, 2022
Publication Information
Publication: Jounral of Hydrometeorology
Publisher: American Meteorological Society
Volume: 23
Issue: 2
Subject Category
Meteorology and Climatology
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 509496.02.08.12.89
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC20K1256
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC20K1530
CONTRACT_GRANT: GSFC - 606.2 GRANT
CONTRACT_GRANT: GSFC - 606.2 GRANT
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
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