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RESEARCH
Science
Geography
Weather extremes shed light
on prairie's past and environment's future
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
8/18/03
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Highway travelers view much of the Midwest as little more than barren
flatlands. The formation of the region and its rich soils, especially
tall grass areas that seemingly should support diverse forests, however,
have long fascinated scientists. Newly available, long-term climate
data now say the area is the product of weather extremes.
Compared with adjacent regions, the tall-grass area of the plains endures
more frequent periods of severe drought, more lightning strikes and
subsequent fires from frequent winter thunderstorms, dryer cold weather
and more rapid plant and soil moisture evaporation, a team of researchers
from the Illinois State Water Survey
and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign says in the current issue
of the journal Physical Geography.
“Beyond the 100 years of scientific curiosity is that these extremes
of weather and their frequency or their non-frequency that we have found
to be critical factors for the plains are actually very important issues
as we face global climate change,” said Stanley A. Changnon, a
water survey scientist and professor of geography.
“The long-term data we’ve gathered and are analyzing can
provide us with very useful guidance as we talk about potential changes
to our agricultural systems and to the way we as people live in general.”
Changnon and his State Water Survey colleagues have digitized national
climate data going back to 1890. Information from before 1948, when
the federal government began a formal record-keeping procedure on computer
punch cards, was taken from records left by volunteer weather observers.
Once they interpreted and entered the information into digital records,
the researchers began analyzing individual weather factors and running
comparisons.
The triangular-shaped tall grass area scrutinized in the study stretches
from Tulsa, Okla., to Fargo, N.D., to Indianapolis. European explorers
entering what they called “an inland sea” found a humid
area with grasses up to 6 feet tall.
Long before, the plains were bulldozed flat during four major glacial
advances and retreats that left behind sands, nutrient-rich soils and
rocks. Wide flat rivers drained the melting ice finally about 11,500
years ago, at which time the tall grasses arose. Shorter domesticated
grasses and farmers’ fields of corn, wheat and soybeans have since
replaced the tall grasses.
To the north and south of the tall-grass region, there emerged extensive
forests. A long-debated scientific question, the researchers noted,
is why the tall-grass prairie only supported grass when the soil easily
could have sprouted diverse forests. Numerous ecological and climate-related
theories have been raised, disputed and discarded.
The newly acquired data – housed at the Midwestern Regional Climate
Center at the State Water Survey – are providing scientifically
strong details, Changnon said.
One of the factors that emerged in the study was not new. The role of
fire in sustaining the prairie and preventing the growth of trees was
first established in the early 1950s, based on pioneer descriptions
of deliberate actions taken by Indians in pursuit of buffalo. The impact
and frequency of fire, however, are now strengthened by the new data
on thunderstorms. The plains average 60 to 80 storms and more than 10,000
minutes of storm activity each year. Only Florida and the Gulf Coast
experience more. The tall grass region also faces a three-to-five-times
greater risk of fire from lightning.
In addition to the heat and searing of fires, severe droughts struck
the region in 15 percent of the almost 105 years covered by the study;
adjacent forested regions to the east and west had droughts in less
than 10 percent of the years, and areas to the north and south were
struck by drought even less frequently.
While rainfall was of similar frequency during summers, cold-weather
precipitation in the tall-grass plains has been dramatically less. In
71 of the years covered, the tall-grass prairie region received less
than 15 inches of precipitation during the winters; adjacent forested
lands to the south had only eight dry seasons.
The periods of dry winters also contributed to dry vegetation, making
the grasses more susceptible to fires set by Indians or caused by lightning.
Another contributing
factor to sustaining the grassland was the frequency and amount of warm-season
evapotranspiration – a process in which moisture evaporates from
the soil and transpires from plants.
Most of the tall-grass triangle had precipitation/evaporation ratios
of .75 or higher, a number that suggests unusually wet warm-season conditions,
in 70 percent of the years studied; adjacent regions in the high plains
had much lower ratios. The researchers theorize that evapotranspiration
rates played a major role in the formation and maintenance of the western
boundary (Tulsa to Fargo) separating the short grasses of the plains
and the tall grass triangle. The tall grasses needed enough warm-weather
precipitation to produce the higher evapotranspiration rate, the researchers
found.
The experience of the Midwest’s prairie is one of extremes, including
some of the very factors that could be more widespread as a result of
global warming, said Changnon, chief emeritus of the State Water Survey.
“What this shows is that the whole environment of the Midwest
has been very sensitive to certain extreme weather events,” he
said. “Having long-term data lets us talk more intelligently about
potential changes in global climate. Most climate modeling generates
average changes, not the frequency of extreme events. Talk of the occurrence
of a 100-year flood really hasn’t been based on 100 years of data;
it may be extrapolated from just 40 years of records, so scientists
must say that a 100-year flood will happen at least once, not necessarily
only once, in 100 years.”
Co-authors of the study, funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, were Changnon, Kenneth E. Kunkel, head of the atmospheric
environment section of the State Water Survey and professor of atmospheric
sciences at Illinois, and Derek Winstanley, chief of the State Water
Survey and professor of geography
at Illinois.
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