Friday, August 21, 2015

Anthony Watts claims a scientist ignored his own work on US droughts

Anthony Watts latest claim (archived here, latest here) is that a scientist ignored his own research. At Anthony's climate conspiracy blog today, he copied and pasted a press release about a new paper on the Californian drought. Anthony wrote his article under the headline "Ridiculous claim from Columbia University: ‘Warming climate is deepening California drought". He thinks that it's ridiculous to think that evaporation will be higher under hotter conditions. He doesn't understand the basics of science at all. He also wrote:
From the THE EARTH INSTITUTE AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY and the department of “intense droughts only occur in the age of the SUV” department, where they apparently failed to take the climatic history of the region into account:
And he put up a chart that he claimed came from from one of the authors of the new paper (though Anthony clearly didn't know that), in an attempt to dismiss this new work. In any case, it didn't. His graphic wasn't in the 2007 paper and the graphic didn't refute the new paper:


Source: WUWT

Anthony said the chart came from a paper by Cook et al (2007). Well, it didn't, though it was probably adapted from Figure 10 in that paper, which itself was redrawn from Cook et al (2004):

Fig. 10. Long-term aridity changes in the West (A) as measured by the percent area affected by drought (PDSIb−1) each year (B) (redrawn from Cook et al., 2004). The four most significant ( pb0.05) dry and wet epochs since AD 800 are indicated by arrows. The 20th century, up through 2003, is highlighted by the yellow box. The average drought area during that time, and that for the AD 900–1300 interval, are indicated by the thick blue and red lines, respectively. The difference between these two means is highly significant ( pb0.001). Source: Cook07

Some ironies about Anthony's drought protest


There are a few things worth pointing out, given Anthony Watts' scoffing, some of which I've commented on before when he's talked about such things:
  • As I said, the drawing he put up isn't the same as in the 2007 paper that Anthony claimed, though it's derived from it.
  • The information about past megadroughts, as shown in the diagrams above, came largely from analysis of tree rings, which Anthony Watts derides usually, except when it comes to megadroughts. (I don't expect he knows that the analysis is based on dendrochronology.)
  • Anthony's chart is for a much wider area of the USA than California. The new paper is just about California.
  • Anthony's chart only goes to 2003. It misses out on all the years of drought from 2003 to the present.
  • The lead author of the 2004 and 2007 papers is Edward R Cook, who is also an author of the current paper that Anthony is scoffing at.

Back to the tiny contribution to the article from Anthony Watts himself. (Yes, the words up top are his sole contribution.) He seems to think that the authors of this new paper think that "intense droughts only occur in the age of the SUV". Does he not even know that at least some of the authors have written extensively about the megadroughts themselves. That they've published lots of papers on the subject. That he, Anthony wouldn't have known the droughts had occurred except for the work of these very same authors?

And what about him saying that they failed to take history into account in this paper. Did the article claim that there have never been droughts in California before? No. It didn't. Did it claim anything about the climatic history of the region? Yes it did. The recent history, not the history of 1,000 years ago. The reason being that the paper was analysing the current drought and comparing it to recent times. One thing the authors looked at was the extent to which anthropogenic warming contributed to the drought.

Anthony must have wanted them to look at something else. Well, they have. Just not in this paper. And I doubt Anthony would be interested in reading their other work.



Human-caused warming worsened the drought via potential evapotranspiration


If you want to know about the new paper, you can read the press release (or if you've a subs to GRL you can download the paper and read it).

The short version is that human-caused warming  is "estimated to have accounted for 8 to 27% of the observed drought anomaly in 2012–2014 and 5–18% in 2014." And there's probably worse to come this century and beyond. Here is a chart from the paper, showing the contribution to the drought. Click to enlarge:

Figure 4. Contributions of anthropogenic warming and natural temperature variability to recent temperature and drought. (a) Annual and (b) 3-year running water year temperature records with four alternate scenarios of anthropogenic warming. (c and d) Contributions of anthropogenic warming versus natural temperature variability to (c) 2014 and (d) 2012–2014 JJA PDSIsc anomalies, where bar colors correspond to the colors of the four anthropogenic warming trends in (a and b). For each of the anthropogenic warming scenarios, natural temperature variability is calculated as the observed temperature minus the warming trend. All time series and bars represent mean conditions across all combinations of climate products. Whiskers bound all values for (a and c) 2014 and (b and d) 2012–2014.




From ScienceDaily.com:
A new study says that global warming has measurably worsened the ongoing California drought. While scientists largely agree that natural weather variations have caused a lack of rain, an emerging consensus says that rising temperatures may be making things worse by driving moisture from plants and soil into the air. The new study is the first to estimate how much worse: as much as a quarter. The findings suggest that within a few decades, continually increasing temperatures and resulting moisture losses will push California into even more persistent aridity.

The study adds to growing evidence that climate change is already bringing extreme weather to some regions. California is the world's eighth-largest economy, ahead of most countries, but many scientists think that the nice weather it is famous for may now be in the process of going away. The record-breaking drought is now in its fourth year; it is drying up wells, affecting major produce growers and feeding wildfires now sweeping over vast areas.

The researchers analyzed multiple sets of month-by-month data from 1901 to 2014. They looked at precipitation, temperature, humidity, wind and other factors. They could find no long-term rainfall trend. But average temperatures have been creeping up--about 2.5 degrees Fahrenheit over the 114-year period, in step with building fossil-fuel emissions. Natural weather variations have made California unusually hot over the last several years; added to this was the background trend. Thus, when rainfall declined in 2012, the air sucked already scant moisture from soil, trees and crops harder than ever. The study did not look directly at snow, but in the past, gradual melting of the high-mountain winter snowpack has helped water the lowlands in warm months. Now, melting has accelerated, or the snowpack has not formed at all, helping make warm months even dryer according to other researchers.

Due to the complexity of the data, the scientists could put only a range, not a single number, on the proportion of the drought caused by global warming. The paper estimates 8 to 27 percent, but Williams said that somewhere in the middle--probably 15 to 20 percent--is most likely.

Last year, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration sponsored a study that blamed the rain deficit on a persistent ridge of high-pressure air over the northeast Pacific, which has been blocking moisture-laden ocean air from reaching land. Lamont-Doherty climatologist Richard Seager, who led that study (and coauthored the new one), said the blockage probably has nothing to do with global warming; normal weather patterns will eventually push away the obstacle, and rainfall will return. In fact, most projections say that warming will eventually increase California's rainfall a bit. But the new study says that evaporation will overpower any increase in rain, and then some. This means that by around the 2060s, more or less permanent drought will set in, interrupted only by the rainiest years. More intense rainfall is expected to come in short bursts, then disappear.

Many researchers believe that rain will resume as early as this winter. "When this happens, the danger is that it will lull people into thinking that everything is now OK, back to normal," said Williams. "But as time goes on, precipitation will be less able to make up for the intensified warmth. People will have to adapt to a new normal."
You can read the full press release here.


From the WUWT comments


I don't think a single person at WUWT realised that Edward R Cook, famed drought expert, whose megadrought chart Anthony put up, was also a co-author of this new paper. Anthony didn't, that's for sure, even though he wrote his name in both places - here and here.

kim thinks that scientists are fools.  It's Kim who's looking foolish, wrongly thinking that the world hasn't warmed. It has.
August 20, 2015 at 7:42 am
Wait, they got this drought while the world hasn’t warmed.
I’ll bet it rains if it does.
Those fools.

Bill Illis doesn't think it will rain in California this autumn, despite the El Nino that's developed. Time will tell. If it does, Bill will probably fulfil the prophecy in the last para I copied from the press release above.
August 20, 2015 at 7:48 am
“Many researchers believe that rain will resume as early as this winter.”
These studies are much like the Gore-effect. As soon as they are published, the opposite happens. Which means, of course, that they are just wrong and made the whole thing up. Much like every climate science prophesy study.

Wolfpack confuses the latent heat of evaporation with greenhouse warming from water vapour:
August 20, 2015 at 7:44 am
“They showed that massive irrigation from underground aquifers has been offsetting global warming in some areas, because the water cools the air.” – All this time I thought the government scientists at NOAA claimed water vapor caused global warming via radiative forcing? 

Tom Crozier is more realistic about California's water problem:
August 20, 2015 at 8:01 am
I just hope it lasts long enough to force the development of new infrastructure. It generally doesn’t. The rain arrives just in time for politicians abandon planned long-term solutions once again.

Phil. questions whether Anthony is correct to say that it's ridiculous that warming worsened the drought, saying it was probably warmer back in the time of the megadroughts, too:
August 20, 2015 at 8:12 am
Ridiculous claim from Columbia University: ‘Warming climate is deepening California drought ‘
The first graph would seem to indicate that the earlier megadroughts were during the Medieval Warm Period, so is the claim so ridiculous? 

tadchem takes the lead from Anthony and decides that if Anthony isn't shy about looking stupid, they why should he or she?:
August 20, 2015 at 8:23 am
Charlatains have co-opted terminology from Statistics to apply the phrase ‘trend analysis” and related vocabulary to the concept that, for practical purposes, is defined as ‘we’re really just making this stuff up’.

MikeH asks how scientists distinguish between drought and temperature when studying tree rings. According to this book, edited by ER Cook (one of the authors of this new paper, and the author of Anthony's drawing) - dendrochronology was used to study historical precipitation before it was used to study surface temperature.
August 20, 2015 at 8:45 am
Hold on.. In the image of the graph at the top of the posting, it states that:
“Evidence from the tree rings shows that drought was historically…”
But, but, but..
Didn’t Michael Mann show that temperature influences tree ring growth, not drought?
Which is it? How does one differentiate between drought and temperature when reading tree rings? Is it more like reading tea leaves in the bottom of the tea cup? It’s up to interpretation of the one reading the rings? Is there a course I can take in Reading Tree Rings? So I too can predict the future.

TomRude decides to join the game of "let's play stupid", too. He probably thinks that there's not been any drought in California. Or that water in California doesn't evaporate. Or that if it evaporates it falls back exactly where it came from.
August 20, 2015 at 9:25 am
“But warming changes the baseline amount of water that’s available to us, because it sends water back into the sky.”
And it is well known that once water is in the sky, it never comes back down… LOL 


References and further reading


A. Park Williams, Richard Seager, John T. Abatzoglou, Benjamin I. Cook, Jason E. Smerdon, Edward R. Cook "Contribution of anthropogenic warming to California drought during 2012–2014." Geophysical Research Letters, 2015 DOI: 10.1002/2015GL064924
  • Warming climate is deepening California drought - press release from ScienceDaily.com

Cook, Edward R., Richard Seager, Mark A. Cane, and David W. Stahle. "North American drought: reconstructions, causes, and consequences." Earth-Science Reviews 81, no. 1 (2007): 93-134. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2006.12.002 (pdf here)

Cook, E.R.,Woodhouse, C.A., Eakin, C.M., Meko, D.M., Stahle, D.W., "Long-term aridity changes in the western United States." (2004) Science 306, 1015–1018 DOI: 10.1126/science.1102586 (pdf here)

From the HotWhopper archives

8 comments:

  1. I went through all the WUWT comments in the archived version trying to detect signs of intelligent life. About the only one is how do they distinguish between drought and temperature in the tree ring record, because that's something I am ignorant about. But even than that had to be expressed in stupid language so as to please the flying monkeys.

    Other than that, dbstealey can rest assured for today that he and his like have seen off any real sceptics

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The one about distinguishing between drought and temperature could also have been formulated as an interested question, rather than assuming that scientists are stupid or evil. But then those people would not be at WUWT.

      It is not my field, but as far as I know it is about selecting the right regions. In regions where the growth of trees is limited by temperature (Arctic or mountains), they are good for temperature. In regions where the temperatures are normally fine, but water is limiting you can use tree rings for drought.

      In addition the spatial extend of the signal can help. To compute the temperature hockey sticks you use global data and an analysis method that focuses on changes that happen everywhere simultaneously (PCA) to see global temperature changes. Droughts are normally more regional and would be largely removed in such an analysis.

      Delete
    2. There's quite a good website on dendrochronology here:

      http://web.utk.edu/~grissino/principles.htm

      And Google scholar brings up lots of papers, on dendrochronology methods and techniques as well as examples of how it's done. For example, the paper below discusses how the authors went about distinguishing precipitation from other climatic influences:

      http://www.pnas.org/content/111/8/2903.full

      Delete
    3. Regarding drought or temperature, these are all parts of the generalized form of Liebig's Law of the Minimum.

      For instance, it helps to add CO2 to sealed greenhouses where everything else is optimized ...
      but the idea that extra CO2 will magically green the Sahara ...
      I don't think so, despite this infamous video.

      Watch 10:00-10:30, Sherwood Idso.

      Delete
  2. It seems logical that tree rings would be particularly good as a measure of past droughts. All indications are that trees grow far more rapidly during periods of abundant water supply.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Trees don't grow all that well during floods.

      Delete
    2. Trees also do not grow all that well when it is too hot for them, you can still use trees in cold locations as proxy for temperature. Just select the right region.

      Delete
    3. Floods are generally short-term events which I wouldn't expect to have much impact on tree-growth.

      Delete

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