2014
DOI: 10.1002/2014wr015592
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Enhancement of rainfall and runoff upstream from irrigation location in a climate model of West Africa

Abstract: This study investigates the impact of potential medium-scale irrigation (about 60,000 km 2 ) on the climate of West Africa using the MIT Regional Climate Model. We find that irrigation at this scale induces an atmospheric response similar to that of large-scale irrigation (about 400,000km 2 ) which was considered in our previous theoretical study. While the volume of water needed for large-scale irrigation is about 230-270 km 3 , the medium-scale irrigation requires about 50 km 3 , and the annual flow of the N… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Bohn and Vivoni (), however, argued that the use of an outdated land cover map and misidentification of irrigated pixels in Mahalov et al () could have resulted in a substantial overestimation of the impact of agricultural irrigation in parts like Chihuahua and regions surrounding the GoC. Agricultural irrigation has also been found to impact monsoons in other parts of the world such as the Asian Monsoon (E. M. Douglas et al, ; Saeed et al, ) and the African Monsoon (Alter et al, ; Im et al, ; Im & Eltahir, ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bohn and Vivoni (), however, argued that the use of an outdated land cover map and misidentification of irrigated pixels in Mahalov et al () could have resulted in a substantial overestimation of the impact of agricultural irrigation in parts like Chihuahua and regions surrounding the GoC. Agricultural irrigation has also been found to impact monsoons in other parts of the world such as the Asian Monsoon (E. M. Douglas et al, ; Saeed et al, ) and the African Monsoon (Alter et al, ; Im et al, ; Im & Eltahir, ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study aims to investigate the impact of irrigation on regional climate based on observational data and model simulations over Eastern China. We test the hypothesis advanced in Im & Eltahir () and Im, Marcella, et al () (Figure S1 in the supporting information) that irrigation with a scale of millions of hectares, such as in NCP, would reduce temperature, increase surface humidity and surface pressure, and induce an anticyclonic circulation that forces changes in precipitation over surrounding regions. The specific objectives of this study are (1) to estimate the local climate change due to irrigation over Eastern China based on observations and (2) to investigate the nature of the physical mechanisms shaping the observed changes in precipitation that are caused by irrigation using numerical modeling experiment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The rapid development of large‐scale irrigation can cause changes in regional climate due to land‐atmosphere interactions. Many studies demonstrate that incremental change in soil moisture through irrigation can lead to increasing local evapotranspiration and latent heat flux and to decreasing temperature and sensible heat flux, which is a first‐order effect on the local surface energy and water budget (Adegoke et al, ; Alter et al, ; Cook et al, ; Douglas et al, ; Huber et al, ; Im & Eltahir, ; Im, Marcella, et al, ; Kang & Eltahir, ; Kueppers et al, ; Mueller et al, ; Qian et al, ; Sacks et al, ). However, the effect of irrigation on precipitation is more complex because of the multiscale processes, including the role of atmospheric circulations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The impact of large‐scale agricultural irrigation on rainfall has been extensively investigated and debated in previous studies (e.g., DeAngelis et al, ; Fowler et al, ; Im et al, ; Im & Eltahir, ; Mahalov et al, ; Zhang et al, ). Irrigation through increased soil moisture can possibly increase rainfall mainly due to enhanced low‐level moisture availability and increased moist static energy for convection.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%