Litcius/Paper detail

Dry landscapes and parched economies: A review of how drought impacts nonagricultural socioeconomic sectors in the <scp>US</scp> Intermountain West

A. N. Wlostowski, Keith S. Jennings, Rachel E. Bash, Jesse Burkhardt, Cameron Wobus, G. R. Aggett

2021Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Water38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract From hampering the ability of water utilities to fill their reservoirs to leaving forests parched and ready to burn, drought is a unique natural hazard that impacts many human and natural systems. A great deal of research and synthesis to date has been devoted to understanding how drought conditions harm agricultural operations, leaving other drought‐vulnerable sectors relatively under‐served. This review aims to fill in such gaps by synthesizing literature from a diverse array of scientific fields to detail how drought impacts nonagricultural sectors of the economy: public water supply, recreation and tourism, forest resources, and public health. We focus on the Intermountain West region of the United States, where the decadal scale recurrence of severe drought provides a basis for understanding the causal linkages between drought conditions and impacts. This article is categorized under: Human Water &gt; Value of Water Science of Water &gt; Water Extremes

Topics & Concepts

RecreationTourismHarmAgricultureNatural resource economicsHazardWater resourcesNatural resourceGeographyEnvironmental planningEnvironmental resource managementBusinessEnvironmental protectionEnvironmental scienceEcologyEconomicsPolitical scienceLawBiologyArchaeologyHydrology and Drought AnalysisPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsClimate variability and models