A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
October 18, 2007
1. Top Item
La Niña's back – so brace for possible deluge
By Matt Weiser, staff writer
Most people know El Niño as the weather monster that brings record rain, floods and highway-closing snowdrifts to
But the weather phenomenon's nasty little sister, La Niña, has been the bigger troublemaker in the
Forecasters say La Niña will bring a greater chance of heavy rain in
In past La Niña years,
La Niña is the opposite of El Niño because it is triggered by a cooling of waters in the equatorial
For areas in between – like
This winter's La Niña should be mild to moderate, according to the National Weather Service. But there are signs of it strengthening.
"It definitely seems to be getting stronger," said Bill Patzert, climatologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and often a contrarian in such predictions. "Right now, I'm saying the dice are loaded."
The historical record for the
"It's kind of an interesting paradox about La Niña," said Kelly Redmond, deputy director at the National Weather Service's
There were epic floods in 1950, 1955, 1965, 1986 and 1997 – all La Niña years, or years with borderline La Niña conditions.
This season has been wet already, with about 1 inch of rain in
El Niño is named after the Spanish term for "Christ child" because it usually emerges in the Pacific around Christmas. It is marked by a warming of equatorial waters, which pushes the jet stream south, bringing more rain to Southern California and less to the
La Niña, or "girl child," usually brings drought to Southern California, and sometimes flooding in the
La Niña, in other words, is more likely to cause record peak flows that threaten devastation.
La Niña is more likely to create prime conditions for the dreaded "Pineapple Express" storms,
Also called "atmospheric rivers," their rain can overwhelm reservoirs. This may force reservoir operators to release more water than downstream levees can handle. These storms also tend to be warm, causing snowmelt in the
All this doesn't mean disaster is ahead this winter. But "it certainly means the water managers and forecasters will have plenty of reason to watch this all winter long,"
Forecasting has improved since the flood of 1997, which caused more than 30 levee breaks in the Central Valley, nine deaths, $2 billion in damage and the biggest evacuation effort in
Back then, said National Weather Service hydrologist Rob Hartman, forecasters could offer flood predictions only two days out – and only on the
Today, thanks to more field monitoring and better computer modeling, five-day forecasts are the norm.
The
Early rain this season also helps, Hartman said, by saturating the ground ahead of major storms. This improves the ability of researchers to forecast runoff when it really matters.
"We're glad to get the moisture," he said. "We just hope it keeps coming because we really don't want another dry year like last year, or we'll be in a pickle for water resources." #
http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/438617.html
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