@usatoday @usatodayweather pushes Fake Climate News about the 100th meridian Agricultural belt

Supposedly the climate of the US Agricultural Belt has shifted 100 miles east according to a model analysis. But as we know, climate models aren’t reality.

Actual data analysis shows it hasn’t and that precipitation in the 100th meridian states has actually increased, which is good for crops.

From Dr. Roy Spencer:


The 100th Meridian Agricultural Scare: Another Example of Media Hype Exceeding Reality

Guest essay by Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D.

A new paper published in the AMS Earth Interactions entitled, Whither the 100th Meridian? The Once and Future Physical and Human Geography of America’s Arid-Humid Divide, Part II: The Meridian Moves East, discusses the climate model-expected drying of the western U.S. and how this will affect the agricultural central- and east- U.S. as the climatological boundary roughly represented by the 100th Meridian moves eastward.

This paper has become a good example of media hype overwhelming actual substance. For example, take this headline from Doyle Rice at USAToday on April 13,

“A major climate boundary in the central U.S. has shifted 140 miles due to global warming”

So, what’s wrong with the headline? Nowhere in the original scientific study can I find any observational evidence of such a shift.

The fact is, the study is a modeling study — not observational. They tell us what might happen in the coming decades, given certain (and numerous) assumptions.

Since I’ve been consulting for U.S. grain interests for the last seven or eight years, I have some interest in this subject. Generally speaking, climate change isn’t on the Midwest farmers’ radar because, so far, there has been no sign of it in agricultural yields. Yields (production per acre) of all grains, even globally, have been on an upward trend for decades. This is fueled mainly by improved seeds, farming practices, and possibly by the direct benefits of more atmospheric CO2 on plants. If there has been any negative effect of modestly increasing temperatures, it has been buried by other, positive, effects.

And so, the study begs the question: how has growing season precipitation changed in this 100th meridian zone? Using NOAA’s own official statewide average precipitation statistics, this is how the rainfall observations for the primary agricultural states in the zone (North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma) have fared every year between 1900 and 2017:

Jun, July, August average monthly precipitation as observed over 5 U.S. states encompassing the 100th Meridian, and as predicted by a CMIP5 (RCP8.5 forcing scenario) multi-model mean from 35N to 50N, and 95W to 105 W (observational data from https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/statewide/time-series; model data from https://climexp.knmi.nl/selectfield_cmip5.cgi?id=someone@somewhere)

What we see is that there has been, so far, no evidence of decreasing precipitation amounts exactly where the authors claim it will occur (and according to press reports, has already occurred).

To the authors’ credit, in their final “Discussion and Conclusions” section of the research paper they admit:

“First, we have shown that state-of-the-art models simulate the aridity gradient across North America poorly.”

“Second, while current Earth system models predict widespread declines in soil moisture and increases in continental aridity, they also simulate increases in net primary productivity. This is because, within the models, the beneficial effects on photosynthesis and water-use efficiency of increased CO2 overwhelm the effects of increased temperature and vapor pressure deficit.” (emphasis added)

The positive effects of more CO2 on global agricultural yields have been tallied, as I have previously discussed here.

Yet, the popular press emphasizes the alarmist nature of the article, even going so far as to make as the central claim something that, as far as I can tell, isn’t even in the paper (!)

Source: http://www.drroyspencer.com/2018/04/the-100th-meridian-agricultural-scare-another-example-of-media-hype-exceeding-reality/


Here is the press release via Eurekalert:

The 100th meridian, where the Great Plains begin, may be shifting

Warming climate may push western aridity to the east

THE EARTH INSTITUTE AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

In 1878, the American geologist and explorer John Wesley Powell drew an invisible line in the dirt-a very long line. It was the 100th meridian west, the longitude he identified as the boundary between the humid eastern United States and the arid Western plains. Running south to north, the meridian cuts northward through the eastern states of Mexico, and on to Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, the Dakotas, and the Canadian province of Manitoba on its way to the pole. Powell, best known for exploring the Grand Canyon and other parts of the West, was wary of large-scale settlement in that often harsh region, and tried convincing Congress to lay out water- and land-management districts crossing state lines to deal with environmental constraints. Western political leaders hated the idea-they feared this might limit development, and their own power-and it never went anywhere. It was not the first time that politicians would ignore the advice of scientists.

The 100th meridian west (solid line) has long been considered the divide between the relatively moist eastern United States, and the more arid West. Climate change may already have started shifting the divide eastward (dotted line). CREDIT Modified from Seager et al. Earth Interactions, 2018

Now, 140 years later, scientists are looking again at the 100th meridian. In two just-published papers, they examine how it has played out in history so far, and what the future may hold. They confirm that the divide has turned out to be very real, as reflected by population and agriculture on opposite sides. They say also that the line appears to be slowly moving eastward, due to climate change. They say it will almost certainly continue shifting in coming decades, expanding the arid climate of the western plains into what we think of as the Midwest. The implications for farming and other pursuits could be huge.

One can literally step over the meridian line on foot, but the boundary it represents is more gradual. In 1890, Powell wrote, “Passing from east to west across this belt a wonderful transformation is observed. On the east a luxuriant growth of grass is seen, and the gaudy flowers of the order Compositae make the prairie landscape beautiful. Passing westward, species after species of luxuriant grass and brilliant flowering plants disappear; the ground gradually becomes naked, with bunch grasses her and there; now and then a thorny cactus is seen, and the yucca plant thrusts out its sharp bayonets.” Today, his description would only partly apply; the “luxuriant grass” of the eastern prairie was long ago plowed under for corn, wheat and other crops, leaving only scraps of the original landscape. The scrubby growth of the thinly populated far western plains remains more intact.

“Powell talked eloquently about the 100th meridian, and this concept of a boundary line has stayed with us down to the current day,” said Richard Seager, a climate scientist at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and lead author of the two papers. “We wanted to ask whether there really is such a divide, and whether it’s influenced human settlement.” He calls the studies an example of “psychogeography”-the examination of how environment affects human decisions. The papers appear in the current edition of the journal Earth Interactions.

While the climate divide is not literally a visible line, it is about the closest thing around, easily seen on maps. Due to global-scale wind patterns, to the west of this longitude, rainfall drops off sharply. East of the line, it picks up sharply. Powell noted correctly that the western plains are dry in part because they lie in the rain shadow of the Rocky Mountains, which rake off almost all the moisture blowing in from the Pacific Ocean. Seager’s team identifies two other factors. In winter, Atlantic storms bring plenty of moisture into the eastern plains and Southeast, but don’t make it far enough to moisten the western plains. In summer, moisture from the Gulf of Mexico moves northward, but that also curves eastward, again providing the East with plenty of precipitation, while the West gets cheated. Seager says there is only one other such major straight-line climate divide on the global map: the one separating the Sahara Desert from the rest of Africa, also due to cutoffs of prevailing oceanic winds.

In the United States, the effects show up in obvious ways. To the west, population density drops sharply. There are fewer homes, commercial facilities and roads. Farms are fewer, but bigger, reflecting the economics of less water and thus lower productivity. To the east, 70 percent of the crop is moisture-loving corn; to the west, aridity-resistant wheat is dominant.

Now, the researchers say, warming climate appears to be pushing the divide east. In the northern plains, rainfall has not changed much, but temperatures are going up, increasing evaporation from the soil. Further south, concurrent shifts in wind patterns are in fact causing less rain to fall. Either way, this tends to push western aridity eastward. Data collected since about 1980 suggests that the statistical divide between humid and arid has now shifted closer to the 98th meridian, some 140 miles east. (In Texas, this would move it roughly from Abilene to Fort Worth.) Seager says year-to-year weather variations may blur the data, and in any case the changes are still too small and gradual to yet affect land use over wide areas. But he is confident that aridity will perceptibly move eastward during the 21st century, and eventually effect large-scale changes.

Seager predicts that as drying progresses, farms further and further east will have to consolidate and become larger in order to remain viable. Unless farmers turn to irrigation or otherwise adapt, they will have to turn from corn to wheat or some other more suitable crop. Large expanses of cropland may fail altogether, and have to be converted to western-style grazing range. Water supplies could become a problem for urban areas.

Some historians say it could be argued that white settlement beyond the meridian influenced everything from the end of slavery (plantations could not expand beyond the line, weakening the South) to the development of modern firearms (settlers with single-shot muskets couldn’t compete with native peoples’ rapid-fire arrow attacks, until they became the first, best customers for new Colt repeating revolvers and rifles). The meridian itself is still registered in the popular imagination by historical roadside signs; books such Wallace Stegner’s “Beyond the Hundredth Meridian”; and the Canadian rock hit “At the Hundredth Meridian.” “It’s a reminder that climate really matters, then as it does today,” said Seager.

The other authors of the study are Nathan Lis of Pennsylvania State University; Jamie Feldman of Columbia Engineering; and Mingfang Tang, Park Williams, Jennifer Nakamura, Haibo Liu and Naomi Henderson, all of Lamont-Doherty.

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Sara
April 18, 2018 3:23 pm

“Second, while current Earth system models predict widespread declines in soil moisture and increases in continental aridity….”
Okay, stop. Just stop. Stop right there. It is modeling, which is guesstimating, not based on empirical evidence but on biased subjective opinions.
Have any of these people gone to the trouble of interviewing or even vaguely talking for a few minutes with people to the west side of that invisible meridian since – oh, say, 1995? I seriously doubt it. I doubt that any of these “researchers” have stirred their stumps outside their offices since they found chairs and desks there.
I worked for an agribiz company for two full years, doing Accounts Receivable. I took every possible opportunity to talk to customers in every state that was on the list, from Tennessee out to Nevada and west Texas. In 2005, while there was a mild drought going on in the central Midwest, there was abundant – in fact, excessive rain – in the Dakotas, so much so that cattle were picking up anthrax from spores that had lain dormant in the soil for over a century. In west Texas, Kansas, Nebraska, etc., the reports were all plentiful rain and abundant crops. The drought in the Midwest broke by late summer, and things were back to normal.
I talked to every kind of farmer or rancher, from corn and soybeans to steers and even some bison being raised for the dinner table, dairy farmers in Illinois and Wisconsin and cotton farmers in west Texas. They all said essentially the same things: weather is normal, business as usual.
Where these people who style themselves “researchers” – and I use THAT term loosely in this case — get this information is beyond me but there is NOTHING – ZERO, ZIP, NADA – NO EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE to support it. Period. It is poppycock.
Rant over, Mods. Enjoy your evening.

Reply to  Sara
April 19, 2018 8:00 am

The glacial maximums are the drier scenarios, not warm periods. That doesn’t mean there wouldn’t be drier local areas if it warms, but in general the earth is moister.

Hocus Locus
April 18, 2018 3:27 pm

SOMEWHERE ALONG THE 100TH MERIDIAN
dang dirt dryer than a dead dog’s donut
cillia ‘n pseudopods need killin’ afore the Spring
leapin’ beepin’ skitters in me bob-nobs early this year
noisome bog shure is noisome, lonesome gulch is lonesome
urban blight rottin’ Facebook posts right outa the ground
manure ‘aint workin’ right, mebbe the animals got flipped around
Harvester’s down for a dagnab Windows 10 ‘Spring Creators’ Update’
tech gets infected more than the critters these days
gotta flub the grubs outa the shrubs, club the nubs an put ’em in tubs
just you watch what I do to this chickin, you won’t cross me agin.
scooches in the haunches! gnarly wooglies in the furament!
12 CCs if interdexylmethyl-asssinine will do the trick, mind the children!
nuthin’ but bills, junk mail ‘n weather models in my mailbox
need a Masters in trivial hoohockey to run this place
media sez I’m the Breadbasket of the World, how about that
they should come and pull my finger,
I feel a dinner roll workin’ up right now

Pop Piasa
Reply to  Hocus Locus
April 18, 2018 4:41 pm

Dude that’s a collector’s item! Is it yours?
Good catch if it’s not.

Hocus Locus
Reply to  Pop Piasa
April 18, 2018 4:53 pm

Mine, I’ve reached the age where I no longer absorb new culture and regurgitate it all at once. Creates odd characters from thin air, always people I’d like to meet.

Pop Piasa
Reply to  Pop Piasa
April 18, 2018 6:08 pm

That’s bongo drums and beatniks deluxe! Excellent off-the-cuff creativity, if anybody cares what I think.

Phil Rae
Reply to  Pop Piasa
April 18, 2018 8:39 pm

I agree! Brilliant! Get a publisher, man!

John harmsworth
Reply to  Hocus Locus
April 19, 2018 8:03 am

Awesome! I can hear the grumpy old farmer voice that goes with it. Known about a hundred of ’em! But they just keep plugging away, doing the job while everybody in the city screams that all is lost and there’s no point. Never any appreciation for the food on the table. Thank God for farmers.

DCA
April 18, 2018 3:44 pm

In the map they show the 98th meridian being approximately along the east line of South Dakota which according to google earth is more like 96.5. The 98th pretty much splits Kansas in equal halves. Their map is inaccurate and exaggerates the significance. The 100th meridian looks pretty much on. According to the map Wichita is on the 98th.
Another inaccuracy is the example of “Abilene to Ft Worth”. It is about 140 miles between the two cities but from 100th to 98th meridians the distance is closer to 100 miles and the limits of Ft Worth are from 97 to 97.5.

Dena
April 18, 2018 4:08 pm

Nobody seems to understand that there are two weather systems working here. As I live in Arizona, we need to understand where all of our rain comes from. In the winter our rain comes from the pacific and we see most of it when it comes from the south west avoiding many of the mountains. In the summer, we have the monsoon that comes from the gulf of Mexico. When I look at the 100th meridian, it runs right down the eastern coast of Mexico indicating that much of the eastern summer rain originates in the gulf area and moves northward. Proof of this is when a hurricane hits the gulf area then decays dropping rain on the states north of the gulf. Can the 100th meridian move around a little bit? Sure but it’s pretty well stuck were it is as the moisture for much of the eastern US is supplied by that northernly flow.

Pop Piasa
April 18, 2018 4:30 pm

“It’s a reminder that climate really matters, then as it does today,” said Seager.
The famous picture of Washington crossing the Delaware comes to mind when I read that.
It is the adaptation to, and even profiting from changes in climate that shaped our history, if you take a closer look. Time to quit trying to change the course of climate and concentrate on the most equitable adaptation approaches so the evolution of society doesn’t take two steps back.

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
April 18, 2018 5:04 pm

The precipitation figure clearly shows a cyclic pattern. There is a need to study this as this is the factor that is going to impact the grain production in this belt.
Irrigation can change the area of production.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

Pop Piasa
Reply to  Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
April 18, 2018 6:22 pm

Dr Reddy, you can see evidence of irrigation in action along the 100° W meridian by using Google Earth and looking for circular patterns, usually greener than the surrounding landscape.

Gene Walker
April 18, 2018 6:31 pm

So the headline should read “Higher Productivity Agriculture and Less Flooding Predicted by Climate Model”

Phoenix44
April 19, 2018 2:10 am

They use a model they admit can’t model the present, adjust it so it looks more like reality now, then think it’s fine to project out 100 years! A model that cannot model what we know as fact can be trusted to model out decades?
It is literally laughable, literally so stupid that its authors should be laughing-stocks. Can you imagine this idiocy in any real science? If climate science had any integrity, it wold police itself and prevent this utter junk being worked on, let alone published.

John harmsworth
Reply to  Phoenix44
April 19, 2018 8:10 am

That’s just about everything anybody needs to know about climate science. It’s garbage! Practised by shamen.

Kristi Silber
April 19, 2018 3:19 pm

i wonder how many of the comments here insulting the research paper or scientists are made by those who actually read and understood it.

Nylo
April 20, 2018 10:23 am

I find this in the press release: Data collected since about 1980 suggests that the statistical divide between humid and arid has now shifted closer to the 98th meridian, some 140 miles east” kinda contradicts Roy Spencer’s claim that the study is not based on observations. What kind of data is it talking about then?