Current Research in 2007
The National Drought Mitigation Center takes
an interdisciplinary approach to reducing societal vulnerability to
drought. We focus on improving ways to monitor drought, assess impacts,
and reduce vulnerability through drought planning. We typically work in
partnership with other academic departments and institutions, federal
agencies, and stakeholders.
Current projects
include:
VegDRI and VegOUT
A joint effort by the National Drought
Mitigation Center (NDMC), the U.S. Geological Survey’s National Center for
Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS), and the High Plains
Regional Climate Center (HPRCC) is underway to develop and deliver timely
geographic information on drought at a 1-km resolution. The biweekly maps
show an experimental drought indicator, the Vegetation Drought Response
Index (VegDRI), developed to provide regional and sub-county scale
information of drought effects on vegetation. VegDRI is produced during
the growing season and completed its first semi-operational year in 2006,
covering a seven-state area in the High Plains. VegDRI is calculated using
data mining techniques that integrate complex information from satellite
measurements, climate-based drought indices, land cover types, soil
characteristics, and additional environmental factors. These VegDRI maps
deliver continuous spatial coverage, and have inherently finer spatial
detail than other commonly available drought indicators such as the U.S.
Drought Monitor. Future development of the VegDRI product is planned to
monitor drought over the lower 48 states using these techniques. More
information and maps can be found at http://gisdata.usgs.net/website/Drought_Monitoring/.
VegOUT will eventually build on VegDRI, incorporating data such as Pacific
Ocean temperatures to produce two-, four-, and six-week outlooks for
vegetation conditions.
NDMC contributors: Brian Wardlow,
Tsegaye Tadesse, Mark Svoboda, Mike Hayes, Cody Knutson, Jun Li, Meghan
Sittler and Kelly Helm Smith
External collaborators: Jesslyn Brown,
U.S. Geological Survey EROS Data Center, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Aashish
Shrestha, UNL Laboratory for Advanced Research Computing; Dr. Sherri
Harms, University of Nebraska-Kearney Computer Science & Information
Systems; Bill Sorensen, High Plains Regional Climate Center; Dr. Greg
Husak, University of California, Santa Barbara Department of
Geography
Sponsor: U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Risk
Management Agency
Drought Impact Reporter
The Drought Impact Reporter is an interactive tool developed by the NDMC to collect, quantify, and map reported drought impacts for the United States. Version 2.0 of the Drought Impact Reporter should be available later this year, with enhanced functionality and a better-looking user interface. The next version will weight impacts by associating them with the original media and user-submitted reports. Outreach to agricultural producers and other potential reporters is also planned, to ensure that reports accurately reflect the full spectrum of geographic and socio-economic conditions. The information provided by the Drought Impact Reporter will help U.S. policy makers and resource managers identify what types of impacts are occurring and where. It can also help individual agricultural producers amass evidence of drought conditions. Information for the impact report database comes from a variety of sources, including on-line drought-related news stories and scientific publications, reviewed by NDMC staff; members of the public who visit the website and submit a drought-related impact; and government agencies such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).
NDMC
contributors: Mike Hayes, Mark Svoboda, Cody Knutson, Meghan Sittler,
Melissa Melvin, Kelly Helm Smith, Soren Scott, Deborah Wood, Donna
Woudenberg, and Brian Fuchs, as well as temporary helpers.
External
collaborators: Dr. Gregg Garfin, CLIMAS, University of Arizona; Ian
Cottingham, UNL’s Laboratory for Advanced Research Computing
Sponsor: USDA’s RMA
Economic Impacts of
Drought
Although drought’s
impacts have been estimated at $6-8 billion per year and at $39 billion in
1988, the scientific and policy communities lack consistent methodologies
to quantify the impacts of drought, especially across sectors, and at
local, regional and national scales. We are working to develop modeling
strategies for estimating direct losses from droughts, and to identify
strategies for incorporating indirect loss estimations into modeling
strategies. Finally, a guide for farmers and ranchers will help them
incorporate our findings into their decision-making.
NDMC
contributors: Mike Hayes, Ya Ding and Donna Woudenberg
External
contributors: Dr. Roger Pulwarty, NOAA’s Climate Diagnostics Center in
Boulder, Colorado; Dr. Chuck Howe, Professor Emeritus, Institute of
Behavioral Science, University of Colorado-Boulder; Dr. Ray Supalla, UNL
Department of Economics; Dr. Karina Schoengold, UNL School of Natural
Resources, Ag Economics and Water Center; Dr. Janie Chermak, University of
New Mexico Economics; and Prabhakar Shrestha, UNL grad student, School of
Natural Resources.
Sponsors: USDA’s RMA, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
Drought Monitor Decision Support
System
The Drought Monitor-Decision
Support System (DM-DSS) will provide a more interactive version of the
Drought Monitor. We are working to incorporate enhancements in spatial and
temporal resolution of various indicators to allow for more specialized or
local planning. The DM-DSS will ideally allow users to drill down to the
local level to assess drought, and will foster a continual process of user
feedback, evaluation, and assessment, especially among farmers and
ranchers.
NDMC contributors: Mark Svoboda, Mike Hayes, Soren
Scott, Brian Fuchs, Cody Knutson, Meghan Sittler, and Kelly Helm Smith.
External collaborators: Ian Cottingham and Xueming Wu, both
from UNL’s Laboratory for Advanced Research Computing
Sponsor: USDA’s
RMA
Incorporating NASA Satellite Data into the Drought
Monitor
The NDMC will work
with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory to see whether NASA’s satellite data
can be used to enhance the Drought Monitor’s performance in reflecting
drought conditions across the United States.
NDMC
contributors: Don Wilhite, Mark Svoboda, Brian Wardlow and Tsegaye
Tadesse.
Sponsor: NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory
The Drought Risk Atlas
The Drought Risk Atlas will provide users with a
comprehensive, site-specific assessment of the history, frequency,
intensity, duration, and patterns of drought in the past century.
Understanding the history of drought in a given area can help producers
make better management decisions. The Drought Atlas will be available as a
web-based decision-support tool.
NDMC contributors: Mark
Svoboda, Brian Fuchs, Jae Ryu, Mike Hayes, Cody Knutson, Meghan Sittler,
Kelly Helm Smith; Jeff Nothwehr and Sandra Jones, NDMC grad
students
External Contributor: Ian Cottingham, UNL’s
Laboratory for Advanced Research Computing
Sponsor: USDA’s
RMA
Drought Planning Tool for Ranchers
The NDMC is developing a model drought
planning process and web-based educational delivery system for forage and
rangeland producers. Working with researchers from the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln, South Dakota State University, Texas A&M
University-Kingsville,- and individual ranchers, the NDMC will identify
essential planning components and develop a generic drought planning
process that can serve as a template for producers.
NDMC
contributors: Cody Knutson, Brian Fuchs, Mike Hayes, Meghan Sittler,
Kelly Helm Smith, Ryan Bjerke, NDMC graduate student
External
collaborators: Dr. Pat Reece, UNL’s Panhandle Research &
Extension Center; Dr. Matt Stockton, UNL’s West Central Research &
Extension Center; Dr. Dick Clark, UNL Department of Agricultural Economics
(retired); Dr. Terry Klopfenstein, UNL Animal Science Dr. Sandy Smart,
South Dakota State University Range Science (SDSU); Dr. Roger Gates, SDSU
West River Ag Center; Dr. Barry Dunn, Texas A&M University-Kingsville,
King Ranch Institute for Ranch Management; Dr. Jerry Volesky, UNL’s West
Central Research & Extension Center; Ben Kutsch, UNL LARC; Dr. Rick
Rasby, UNL Animal Science
Sponsor: USDA’s
RMA
Project GreenLeaf
The GreenLeaf Project, a cooperative development
between the USDA Risk Management Agency, the National Drought Mitigation
Center and the UNL Laboratory for Advanced Research Computing, is being
developed to apply leading distributed computing research techniques with
proven climatic and agronomic research to provide farmers and ranchers
with real-time, sub-county resolution, risk assessment and decision
support tools which can be utilized with the ease of use associated with
common internet search engines.
NDMC contributors: Mike
Hayes, Mark Svoboda, Cody Knutson, Brian Wardlow, Meghan Sittler, Kelly
Helm Smith
External collaborators: Ian Cottingham, Jon
Kokulil, and Xueming Wu from UNL’s Laboratory for Advanced Research
Computing
Sponsor: USDA’s RMA
Enhancing the
Advanced Hydrologic Prediction Service
The NDMC is collaborating with the National Weather
Service on pilot projects to enhance the Advanced Hydrologic Prediction
Service (AHPS). Currently, the AHPS system provides river
flow/stage and forecast information at more than 3,600 forecasts points
across the United States. Along with this information, AHPS also describes
potential flood impacts that may occur near each forecast point. In order
expand the system to include low-flow information, pilot studies have been
conducted in Minnesota’s Mississippi River Basin; the North Platte River
Basin of Nebraska, Wyoming, and Colorado; and the Upper Missouri River
Basin in Montana and Wyoming. Additional studies are currently being
conducted in the Trinity River Basin in Texas and the Red and Souris river
basins of North Dakota and Montana. As part of this effort, the NDMC is
identifying potential impacts of low river flows within the study areas
through surveys of relevant local, state, and federal water
administrators. Providing river flow and potential impact information
allows communities, states, and federal interests to better understand
their vulnerabilities and make more informed decisions when preparing for
and responding to potentially hazardous situations.
NDMC
contributors: Cody Knutson, Donna Woudenberg, Mark Svoboda, Meghan
Sittler, and Sandra Jones, NDMC graduate student
External
collaborators: Doug Kluck, NWS Central Region Headquarters; Ben
Weiger, NWS Southern Region Headquarters
Sponsor: National
Weather Service
Mitigating the Economic Risk of Stock
Reduction During Drought
Overgrazing is a common problem that not only
affects rangelands during drought but also makes it harder for range
conditions to improve following drought. Therefore, we are collaborating
in the development of a grazing management computer program called "The
Grazing Manager." The software will help ranchers across the western
United States match grass production with appropriate cattle stocking
rates during drought. Final software release is expected in March
2007.
NDMC contributors: Cody Knutson and Mike
Hayes
External collaborators: Tom Buman of Agren, Inc.; Paul
Mitchell of Texas A&M; and Jerry Hatfield of the USDA Agricultural
Research Service
Sponsor: USDA’s RMA
A
Real-Time Ground Water Monitoring Network for Nebraska
The project partners are
developing a near real-time ground water monitoring network for Nebraska.
Sensors will be designed to record and analyze ground water levels at more
than 50 monitoring stations across Nebraska. This information will be
transmitted through a wireless telecommunication system on a daily basis
and be made available to the public through a web-based user interface.
The ultimate goal of the project is to develop a relatively low-cost
monitoring system that will provide near real-time ground water
information to drought planners and other environmental stakeholders
across Nebraska.
NDMC contributor: Cody Knutson
External collaborators: Mark Burbach, UNL’s School of Natural
Resources; Byrav Ramamurthy, UNL Computer Science and Engineering; and
Yuyan Xue, CSE graduate student
Sponsor: USDA’s
RMA
Soil Moisture Research Project
Soil moisture is an integral
part of the hydrologic cycle and is an important method for establishing
the severity of drought. Unfortunately most locations in the United States
rely solely on model output for determination of soil moisture status. In
Nebraska, we are privileged to have daily soil water content measurements
at sites in the Automated Weather Data Network (AWDN). Fourteen of these
locations have reliable soil moisture data dating back to the late 1990’s
and these data are the focal point of our soil moisture research. Since
the first year(s) of soil moisture implementation in the AWDN Network, the
entire state of Nebraska has experienced long periods of precipitation
deficits and corresponding drought impacts. The main goal of this project
is to use archived soil moisture data as a method to determine the
severity and duration of drought and see how it holds up compared with
other drought indices.
NDMC contributor: Eric Hunt, grad
student, Don Wilhite
External collaborators: Dr. Ken Hubbard,
Sebastien Korner and Bill
Sorensen, High Plains Regional Climate
Center
Sponsors: HPRCC and NDMC
Republican River Basin Decision-Support Web Portal
The National Drought Mitigation Center (NDMC) will be developing a decision-support web portal for the Republican River Basin in Nebraska, Colorado and Kansas, with support from the Sectoral Applications Research Program of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Dr. Cody Knutson is the principle investigator, with Mark Svoboda and Dr. Jae Ryu of the NDMC serving as co-investigators, along with managers and staff of the Lower, Middle and Upper Republican Natural Resources Districts (NRDs) in Nebraska. Under the terms of the two-year grant, the NDMC will collaborate with the NRDs to identify and compile local drought monitoring and planning information needed by resource managers in the basin, including government agencies, local community planners, and agricultural producers, and package it into a web portal. The portal will eventually be housed on the websites of the natural resource districts, and can serve as a model for developing local applications of the National Integrated Drought Information System.
NDMC contributor: Dr. Cody Knutson, Mark Svoboda, Dr. Jae Ryu
External collaborators: Bryan Lubeck, Lower Republican Natural Resources District; Daniel Smith, Middle Republican Natural Resources District; Jasper Fanning, Upper Republican Natural Resources District
Sponsors: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Sectoral Applications Research Program
Developing Seasonal Predictive Capability for Drought Mitigation Decision Support System
Developing Seasonal Predictive Capability for Drought Mitigation Decision Support System will help add a forecast component to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Researchers will incorporate climate modeling and satellite observations to see whether they can provide more useful information to decision-makers. They’ll be working with end-users of the Drought Monitor Decision Support System (DMDSS) to assess whether the additional forecast information improves decisions. The end-users are two agricultural producer organizations, The Irrigation Association and The Corn Growers Association, and two local agencies, the Central Illinois Irrigated Growers Association and the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources. The project is expected to begin in spring of 2008 and to take three years to complete.
NDMC Contributors: Jae Ryu, Mark Svoboda, Cody Knutson, Meghan Sittler, and Don Wilhite.
External Collaborators: Ximing Cai (principal investigator) and Praveen Kumar, from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Illinois, Urbana; Xin-Zhong Liang, James Angel, and Michael Palecki, from the Illinois State Water Survey, Illinois Department of Natural Resources and University of Illinois.
Sponsor: The National Aeronautic and Space Administration
Integrating Enhanced GRACE Water Storage Data into the U.S. and North American Drought Monitors
Integrating Enhanced GRACE Water Storage Data into the U.S. and North American Drought Monitors will focus on incorporating NASA’s GRACE satellite data enhanced by hydrologic modeling into the U.S. and North American Drought Monitors. Ideally, the additional data will be incorporated into the “objective blends,” the strictly numeric drought map summaries produced weekly for the U.S. Drought Monitor. Researchers will be able to measure the difference in objective blends with and without the additional data, and will incorporate stakeholder feedback in gauging the effectiveness of the changes. The project is expected to begin in spring of 2008 and to take three years to complete.
NDMC Contributors: Mark Svoboda, Brian Wardlow
External Collaborators: Matthew Rodell (principal investigator) from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, and Jay Lawrimore (principal investigator) and Richard Heim from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Climatic Data Center, James S. Famiglietti, from the University of California at Irvine; Rolf Reichle, from the Goddard Space Flight Center and the University of Maryland; Benjamin F. Zaitchik, from the Goddard Space Flight Center and the Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center in College Park, MD; and Ana Pinheiro, from NCDC and STG Incorporated.
Sponsor: The National Aeronautic and Space Administration
© 2008 National Drought Mitigation Center
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