Publication | Closed Access
On the Potential Impact of Irrigated Areas in North America on Summer Rainfall Caused by Large-Scale Systems
105
Citations
10
References
1998
Year
EngineeringEarth ScienceIrrigation ManagementDrought Risk ManagementIrrigated AreasPast IrrigationClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyPotential ImpactSurface RunoffGeographyIrrigationHydrologyWater BalanceClimatologyWater ResourcesDroughtDrylandsDrought ManagementNorth America
Abstract The potential impact of the increase in irrigated areas in North America during the past 100 years on summer rainfall associated with medium- to large-scale precipitation systems is evaluated conceptually and by several illustrative numerical model simulations. The model results for the simulated cases suggest a tendency toward some increase in the continental-average rainfall for the present irrigation conditions compared with those of past irrigation. The maximum increase obtained for several studied cases of 6-day duration each was 1.7%. Rainfall increases typically occur in the location of existing rainfall areas, and the main effect of irrigation is to redistribute rainfall in those preexisting precipitation regions.
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