Laurence G. Riddle
University of California, San Diego
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Featured researches published by Laurence G. Riddle.
Journal of Climate | 1999
Daniel R. Cayan; Kelly T. Redmond; Laurence G. Riddle
Frequency distributions of daily precipitation in winter and daily stream flow from late winter to early summer, at several hundred sites in the western United States, exhibit strong and systematic responses to the two phases of ENSO. Most of the stream flows considered are driven by snowmelt. The Southern Oscillation index (SOI) is used as the ENSO phase indicator. Both modest (median) and larger (90th percentile) events were considered. In years with negative SOI values (El Nino), days with high daily precipitation and stream flow are more frequent than average over the Southwest and less frequent over the Northwest. During years with positive SOI values (La Nina), a nearly opposite pattern is seen. A more pronounced increase is seen in the number of days exceeding climatological 90th percentile values than in the number exceeding climatological 50th percentile values, for both precipitation and stream flow. Stream flow responses to ENSO extremes are accentuated over precipitation responses. Evidence suggests that the mechanism for this amplification involves ENSO-phase differences in the persistence and duration of wet episodes, affecting the efficiency of the process by which precipitation is converted to runoff. The SOI leads the precipitation events by several months, and hydrologic lags (mostly through snowmelt) delay the stream flow response by several more months. The combined 6-12-month predictive aspect of this relationship should be of significant benefit in responding to flood (or drought) risk and in improving overall water management in the western states.
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2004
Anthony L. Westerling; Daniel R. Cayan; Timothy J. Brown; Beth L. Hall; Laurence G. Riddle
Wildfires periodically burn large areas of chaparral and adjacent woodlands in autumn and winter in southern California. These fires often occur in conjunction with Santa Ana weather events, which combine high winds and low humidity, and tend to follow a wet winter rainy season. Because conditions fostering large fall and winter wildfires in California are the result of large-scale patterns in atmospheric circulation, the same dangerous conditions are likely to occur over a wide area at the same time. Furthermore, over a century of watershed reserve management and fire suppression have promoted fuel accumulations, helping to shape one of the most conflagration-prone environments in the world [Pyne, 1997]. Combined with a complex topography and a large human population, southern Californian ecology and climate pose a considerable physical and societal challenge to fire management.
Water Resources Research | 1993
Daniel R. Cayan; Laurence G. Riddle; Edward Aguado
Archive | 1995
Maria K Filonczuk; Daniel R. Cayan; Laurence G. Riddle
Archive | 1992
Daniel R. Cayan; Laurence G. Riddle; David C. Garen; Edward Aguado
28th Annual Conference and Symposium:American Water Resources Association | 1992
Daniel R. Cayan; Laurence G. Riddle
Archive | 1993
Daniel R. Cayan; Laurence G. Riddle
Archive | 2006
Sam F. Iacobellis; Daniel R. Cayan; Laurence G. Riddle
Archive | 2004
Laura M. Edwards; Daniel R. Cayan; Kelly T. Redmond; Greg McCurdy; Laurence G. Riddle; Mary Tyree
Archive | 2004
Anthony L. Westerling; Daniel R. Cayan; Beth L. Hall; Laurence G. Riddle