The Impact of El Niño on the Southern Hemisphere and its Global Consequences

The Impact of El Niño on the Southern Hemisphere and its Global Consequences

It is a well-known fact that water is the key‍ to ​life on Earth.⁣ But it is less well known that only about 1% of all water on the planet is fresh water available to humans, plants or land-based animals.

The rest is in the oceans, or locked up in polar ice sheets and rocks. In a climate changing world, the global distribution of that 1% ⁤takes on a ‌whole new significance.

A ⁤new study published in ⁣Science has‍ shown that the southern hemisphere has been drying out more than the northern hemisphere over the past two decades (2001–2020). The authors suggest the principle ‍cause is the ⁣weather phenomenon known as El Niño, ‍which occurs every few years when ocean water in the⁤ eastern Pacific⁢ is warmer than usual.

The findings are based on data⁣ from satellites and measurements of ⁣river and stream flows, which enabled ‌the authors to model and calculate changes in water availability. Water ‍availability⁢ is⁤ the net difference between ‍the amount of water supplied to the landscape, in the form of rainfall on land, ‍and the water removed to the ⁣atmosphere ⁤by ⁢general evaporation or by plants through their leaves.

Even though the southern hemisphere has only a quarter of the global land area (excluding Antarctica), it appears to have a substantially greater effect on​ global water availability than the‍ northern hemisphere.

2023-11-03 11:41:03
Original from ‌ phys.org

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