2 research outputs found
Drought Planning and Management: Using High Spatial Resolution as Part of the Solution
Water
scarcity is intensified by drought, a phenomenon that impacts
many sectors of society and affects virtually all climate zones. The
Palmer drought indices are widely used by scientists and policy makers
to understand drought and model its components. Despite the spatial
heterogeneity and variability in variables required by the Palmer
model, regional index values are most commonly used for real-time
drought assessment. Local stakeholders charged with developing flexible
and tailored water management policies have articulated the need for
drought indices calculated at finer spatial resolutions than a regional
scale. We use the Pacific Northwest United States (U.S.) as a study
area to demonstrate the differences between drought indices calculated
for U.S. climate divisions with those calculated at a 0.5° by
0.5° latitude/longitude resolution. Our results indicate that
regional values of the two cumulative Palmer drought indices do not
represent finer-resolution values well. For half of the study area,
the pictures of drought (as determined by regional and finer-resolution
values) are drastically different more than 30% of the time. Thus,
quite often water managers do not have a clear understanding of the
relative severity of drought in their area, which can have serious
implications for drought mitigation and adaptation