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We
distinguish between hydrologic and agricultural droughts,
although many people believe that they are the same.
A geologic drought occurs when annual rainfall decreases
substantially below normal annual rainfall, and when
annual recharge is unable to restore river flow and
groundwater tables to their normal winter highs. It
often takes two or more years for these serious geologic
droughts to occur. Agricultural droughts occur whenever
seasonal rainfall from planting to harvest falls significantly
below normal levels. Since our soils only hold a week
or so's supply for the plant, yield falls below long
term average yields during agricultural droughts. Rainfall
is almost always below the evapotranspiration; so, yields
typically are lower than their potential every year,
but this is not considered a drought.
Note,
the Hydrologic Year is often used when examining rainfall,
flow in rivers or elevation of groundwater tables. For
the Southeast, the hydrologic year begins at the normal
end of the low rainfall period, which is also the time
when trees and plants begin to decrease water use. Thereafter,
water tends to accumulate in soil, groundwater tables
rise, and river flow increases, as net rainfall exceeds
net evaporation. In the latter half of the hydrologic
year the opposite occurs.
Page
created by James E. Hook on Dec 7, 1998. Last updated
June 18, 2002.
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