Abstract

Abstract. Global agricultural drought policy has shifted towards promoting drought preparedness and climate resilience in favor of disaster-relief-based strategies. For this approach to be successful, drought predictability and methods for assessing the many aspects of drought need to be improved. Therefore, this study aims to bring together meteorological and hydrological measures of drought as well as vegetation and soil moisture data to assess how droughts begin, propagate and subsequently terminate for a catchment in eastern Australia. For the study area, 13 meteorological drought periods persisting more than 6 months were identified over the last 100 years. During these periods, vegetation health, soil moisture and streamflow declined; however, all of the indicators recovered quickly post-drought, with no evidence of extended impacts on the rainfall–runoff response, as has been observed elsewhere. Furthermore, drought initiation and propagation were found to be tightly coupled to the combined state of large-scale ocean–atmosphere climate drivers (e.g., the El Niño–Southern Oscillation, the Indian Ocean Dipole and the Southern Annular Mode), whereas termination was caused by persistent synoptic systems (e.g., low-pressure troughs). The combination of climatic factors, topography, soils and vegetation are believed to be what makes the study catchments more resilient to drought than others in eastern Australia. This study diversifies traditional approaches to studying droughts by quantifying the catchment response to drought using a range of measures that could also be applied in other catchments globally. This is a key step towards improved drought management.

Highlights

  • Drought is most defined as a deficiency in water to meet needs (Redmond, 2002)

  • Meteorological drought refers to a decline in precipitation, whereas hydrological drought is caused by runoff deficits

  • Drought events are punctuated by periods with positive standardized precipitation index (SPI) values, with a large change in the SPI in the month of drought termination (0.51–2.04)

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Summary

Introduction

Drought is most defined as a deficiency in water to meet needs (Redmond, 2002). Agricultural droughts, in comparison, are defined by declines in vegetation and conditions suitable for agricultural productivity (e.g., declines in soil moisture) that, in turn, lead to reduced economic activity and subsequent socioeconomic drought (van Dijk et al, 2013). Further to this complexity, the processes of how meteorological drought leads to the other forms of drought are still poorly understood (Dai, 2011; Kiem et al, 2007; Verdon-Kidd et al, 2017). This issue has a global dimension, with every continent experiencing water scarcity at some time over varying durations

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