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| Dr O’Donnell’s team analysed the width of growth rings sampled from locally growing native cypress trees (Callitris columellaris) [Credit: David Clarke] |
The study—published in the journal PLOS ONE—indicates summer-autumn rainfall in the semi-arid Pilbara was unusually frequent and intense from 1995–2012, averaging 310mm compared to an average of just 229mm over the previous two centuries.
“It’s not that obvious what the causes of this are,” Dr O’Donnell says. “There are lots of broad-scale circulation patterns influencing rainfall in the region.”
One circulation pattern that stands out is the Southern Annular Mode (SAM), a wind belt in the Southern Ocean.
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| Alison taking samples from a Callitiris [Credit: Gerald Page] |
“Other studies have suggested a link between anthropogenic changes and the SAM, and in turn, we’ve related the SAM to rainfall in north-western Australia. They’re linked to each other, but we don’t entirely understand the mechanism behind it.”
Dr O’Donnell’s team analysed the width of growth rings sampled from locally growing native cypress trees (Callitris columellaris).
“We use a hollow borer to drill into the trunk, and we pull out a little core of wood, about the size of a drinking straw, and in that you can see the bands of tree growth,” she says.
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| A Callitris tree in the Pilbara [Credit: Alison O'Donnell] |
By correlating growth ring width in a particular year with known rainfall for that year, Dr O’Donnell developed a model that allowed her to estimate summer-autumn rainfall as far back as 1800.
“We can now see this unusual period of high rainfall, which is obvious in the record for the last 20 years, is still unusual in the last 200 years,” she says.
Dr O’Donnell says her data suggests the recent increase in regional rainfall is also related to a higher frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones in the inland Pilbara.
“Our ongoing research is now focused on expanding our network of tree ring sites in order to better understand the rainfall history of Western Australia,” she says.
Author: Cristy Burne | Source: Science Network WA [July 08, 2015]








