During the hydrological year 2015–2016 (September to August) a
severe drought affected the Balearic Islands, with substantial consequences
(alleviated partially by desalination plants) on water availability for
consumption from reservoirs and aquifers and also on the vegetation cover. In
particular, a plague of
The Balearic Islands are located in the central part of the western
Mediterranean basin (Fig. 1). The archipelago presents a well-marked
interannual variability in the annual precipitation, as shown by Homar
et al. (2010). Within this interannual variability, a particularly severe
drought episode occurred during the hydrological year (September to August)
2015–2016. The drought affected the eastern part of the Iberian
Peninsula, as reported by the Spanish Meteorological Agency (AEMET,
The Balearic Islands: MaA is the Mallorca airport; MeA is the Menorca airport; IbA is the Ibiza airport. Locations of the other climatological stations analyzed in the text are also indicated.
The lands to the north, east and west of the Mediterranean Sea have
a climate that is characterized by a mild and rainy winter and a warm and dry
summer. According to the classification of Köppen these are thus
considered to have a Csa-type climate (Peel et al., 2007). This type
takes the generic name of “Mediterranean climate”. The Köppen
classification global map is determined from gross climatic features; when
analyzing the data at higher resolution, noticeable differences are found,
even between contiguous areas of reduced extent. The Balearic Islands
(Fig. 1), with a typical Mediterranean climate, is a specific example of a
context exhibiting notable climatic differences within a relatively small
region. Given the size of the islands (Mallorca, the largest, extends over
3640 km
Ombrothermic diagram (Gaussen, 1955) for the Mallorca airport (1981–2010) (after Jansà et al., 2017). The continuous line is the mean temperature. The dashed line is the mean precipitation.
Another characteristic of the rainfall over the Balearic Islands is its marked seasonality. The ombrothermic diagram for the Mallorca airport (Fig. 2; Jansà et al., 2017) shows the most outstanding features of the Mediterranean climate: the abovementioned scarcity of precipitation during the summer, the relatively high temperatures during this period of the year and the mild and relatively wet autumn and winter. Ending a hot summer after 2 months with almost no precipitation somehow characterizes the type of vegetation present in the lowlands (pines, shrubs, bushes and steppes but also almond trees). At the same time, the islands have an economy fundamentally dependent on tourism (in 2016, Balearic airports received 36.8 million passengers, according to the official web pages of the three airports) that is mainly concentrated in the summer months. The supply of drinking water during this period depends critically on underground aquifers (and on the supplementary action of desalination plants) since existing reservoirs in the rainiest mountainous area of Mallorca are too small. After the long and extreme summer, the recovery of the aquifers is strongly determined by the amount of rainfall received during the autumn and the following winter. The flora will be subjected to greater or lesser hydric stress depending mainly on the behavior of autumn rainfall. The occurrence of large water stress situations is not uncommon given the high interannual variability that characterizes annual precipitations in the Balearic Islands (Homar et al., 2010). Extreme manifestations of such variability are not new; there are written references about important droughts affecting the archipelago during the Middle Age (Barceló, 1991) as well as many oral references to the hazardous drought that occurred during 1912–1913 in Mallorca, a time when the local economy was almost exclusively dependent on agriculture.
Given the strong water deficit imposed on the vegetation by the end of the summer and also the natural cycle of the underground aquifers, it may be more suitable to analyze precipitation in terms of the hydrological year (September to August). Additionally, in order to account for the vegetation stress in more detail, it becomes more informative to calculate the annual water balance in which precipitation and evaporation are presented together (considering for the latter the potential evapotranspiration, EVT) and to compare it with the climatic water balance for which the local vegetation has adapted.
This paper presents in Sect. 2 the interannual variability of the precipitation regime in the Balearic Islands, from both the standard and hydrological year perspectives, as well as the climatic water balance of the region. Section 3 discusses the water balance for the hydrological year 2015–2016 in detail. In Sect. 4 the circulation pattern of the exceptional context that led to the severe drought of that year is analyzed and compared with the pattern of an illustrative wet year. Finally, Sect. 5 presents the main findings and conclusions of the study.
Monthly precipitation values at Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza airports from 1973 to 2016 (44 years) have been analyzed. These are the longest climatic series without gaps in the Balearic Islands. From the monthly values, annual accumulations as well as those corresponding to the 43 hydrological years from 1973–1974 to 2015–2016 have been calculated.
The anomalies of the annual rainfall with respect to the average of the
reference period 1981–2010 for the airports of Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza
have been considered (not shown). The yearly mean for the reference period at
Mallorca is 411.3 mm and the interannual variability of the series is large
enough as to yield a standard deviation of 100.9 mm (coefficient of variation
CV
As revealed by the CV values, the variability is greater in Ibiza than in Menorca, although there are anomalies in both stations that occasionally exceed 200 mm. It is noteworthy the relatively low correlation (0.54) that exists between the time series of Mallorca and Menorca, but especially low is the correlation between the time series of Menorca and Ibiza (0.30). For Mallorca and Menorca there are few cases in which a positive anomaly in one station does not correspond to the same sign in the other. One of such cases is 2016, when the intense rainfall recorded in Mallorca during the months of October and December (107.6 and 150.4 mm, respectively) explains the positive anomaly of its airport; however, this event did not affect Menorca (13.2 and 79.8 mm, respectively).
Spatial distribution of accumulated precipitation for 1996 (wet
year) and 1999 (dry year). The same scale is used (from
Time series of the relative annual precipitation anomalies at the Mallorca airport and for Mallorca as a whole derived from the PREGRIDBAL project.
It should be noted that a wet (dry) year at the airports tends to be accompanied by greater (lower) than normal annual precipitation in the rest of each respective island. Figure 3 shows this kind of distribution for the years 1996 and 1999, considered as wet and dry years, respectively. However, some kind of objective index should be applied to analyze the representativeness of the interannual variability of the rainfall captured by the airports, especially in Mallorca, where the spatial variability of the annual rainfall is very high as previously indicated (López et al., 2017). An analysis of the spatial representativeness of the interannual variability captured by the Mallorca airport has been performed using two methodologies. First, the time series of the relative annual anomalies (anomaly divided by the corresponding annual average) have been calculated for five meteorological stations located in Mallorca, and the resulting mean time series (of the five individual series) has been determined. The five stations are representative of different pluviometric regimes of the island: mountainous area, north, center, east and south. For this analysis, the period 1981–2010 has been considered. The time series of annual relative anomalies at Mallorca airport has been compared against the above mean time series. The time series exhibit a correlation coefficient as high as 0.9. The second method is analogous to the previous one but uses the precipitation analyses across the island of Mallorca that were derived in the PREGRIDBAL project (López et al., 2017). These analyses have a resolution of 100 m and use all available observed data for each product requested. Annual precipitation grid data have been considered for each of the years 1980–2009, together with the grid analysis of mean precipitation corresponding to these 30 years. For each grid point and for each year the relative annual anomalies have been determined and a time series expressing the spatial average of annual anomalies has been calculated. Finally, this time series has been compared against the relative anomalies at Mallorca airport, yielding in this case a correlation coefficient of 0.86 (Fig. 4). Thus, it seems well justified the assumption that the spatial–temporal variability in the island of Mallorca is correctly captured by the series of precipitations at the Mallorca airport.
Due to their relatively small size and moderate orography, the spatial variabilities of the annual mean precipitation in Menorca and Ibiza are much lower than in Mallorca; therefore it seems clear that the corresponding time series at the airports are even more representative of the corresponding interannual variability of the whole islands.
Figure 5 shows the precipitation anomalies at the airports of Mallorca,
Menorca and Ibiza for the hydrological years 1973–1974 to 2015–2016 (43 years)
with respect to the reference period 1980–1981 to 2009–2010. Recall the
hydrological year comprises from September to August. The mean precipitation
for the reference period in Mallorca is 409.5 mm, with a standard deviation
of 119.2 mm (CV
Anomalies of the precipitation for the hydrological year at the airports of Mallorca Menorca and Ibiza with respect to the respective averages calculated for the reference period 1980–1981 to 2009–2010.
Looking at Fig. 5, it can be observed that dry hydrological years leading to water stress on the flora, and probably on the aquifers, become clearly distinguishable. The periods 1981 to 1984, 1991 to 1994 and 1998 to 2001 are noteworthy. It can be observed that in 2015–2016 there are also negative anomalies that are much more important in Menorca.
Although there are several indices to characterize a drought (e.g., the Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI), Palmer, 1965; the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI), McKee et al., 1993; Supply Demand Index (SDDI), Rind et al., 1990), from an ecological point of view and in order to account for the possible water stress on the flora, it is interesting to analyze the water balance directly, in which the precipitation is compared against the evaporation, month by month, and from this balance to evaluate the periods of the year in which there is an excess or lack of water in the soil. In this sense there are studies on the effects of droughts on the Mediterranean flora in Spain (e.g., Peñuelas et al., 2001). The determination of the potential evapotranspiration (PET) is an important step when estimating soil water deficit or excess. However, empirical formulas for estimating PET have their limitations, and the results cannot be considered at the same level of exactitude as precipitation measurements. In consequence, the comparison between precipitation and PET has to be regarded as an approximation to the reality. The existence of several analytical expressions to calculate PET using different variables also demonstrates the difficulty to determine this magnitude accurately.
Estimation of the climatic water balances at the three airports was carried out using the Thornthwaite method (1948) for the determination of monthly PET, using monthly mean temperature and precipitation values referred to the reference period 1981–2010. In our analysis, actual evaporation is considered to coincide with calculated PET when monthly precipitation is greater than PET, and in these circumstances the remaining precipitation is converted to water stored in the soil. These amounts can be cumulative through the year and, if the total storage reaches a value which is considered to be the maximum capacity of the soil, the excess becomes surface runoff and infiltration. The maximum storage of the soil depends on several factors, e.g., the texture, land use and slope of the terrain. Botey and Moreno (2015) have produced a map of the soil maximum storage for the Iberian Peninsula and the Balearic Islands. From the information displayed in their map, for the lowlands of the Balearic Islands where the used meteorological stations are located, 100 mm can be considered a reasonable value. If the monthly precipitation is less than the PET, then the actual evaporation is equal to the precipitation plus the reserve portion of the soil moisture that is needed, until it is exhausted. The remaining difference between PET and actual evaporation is indicative of the water deficit that has to be overcome by vegetation. Balance calculations begin in the month of September, considering that the soil does not contain any water after the dry summer.
Climatic water balance (1981–2010) at the airports of Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza (MaA, MeA and IbA in Fig. 1). Lines: blue is precipitation (mm); brown is potential evapotranspiration (mm); dashed green is evaporation (mm). Colored areas: green is the accumulation of water in the soil; cyan is the evaporation of water stored in the soil; blue is runoff; brown is the water deficit in the soil.
Figure 6 shows the climatic water balance (1981–2010) during the hydrological year, according to the indicated method, for the airports of Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza. Climatologically, there is deficit in Mallorca for the first month of September. There is storage of water in the soil from October to February, which is totally exhausted by the end of June. During the summer (June–August) the deficit is very large, reaching 150 mm. At the Menorca airport there is also a deficit in September, the accumulation of water in the soil begins in October, and there is runoff or/and infiltration during January, February and March. The water stored in the soil of Menorca allows for evaporation to be larger than precipitation even in June, with a total lack of soil water observed only in July and August. The maximum deficit also reaches 150 mm. At Ibiza the water balance is very similar to Mallorca but the storage of water in the soil during the winter is lower and therefore it is consumed more quickly, inducing a large deficit during all the summer.
The climatic water balance at Menorca and Ibiza airports can be considered representative of the whole islands. In contrast, for the larger and more complex island of Mallorca it is evident, bearing in mind Fig. 3 and the results of Guijarro (1986) and Jansà (2014), that the water balance of the airport cannot, in any way, be extended to the whole island. The water balance shown is representative of the south of Mallorca. It is also indicative of the situation in the western and eastern coastal zones and in the center of the island, although the latter zone tends to store a little more water in the soil during the winter as a consequence of the higher precipitation (recall Fig. 3). For the northern and northeastern zones of Mallorca the water balance is expected to be much more similar to that at the Menorca airport, as the rainfall regimes are quite similar in monthly distributions and amounts. In the mountainous area of Mallorca the water balance is certainly very different to that at the airport, as the climatological annual precipitation is almost 4 times greater. In this zone there are two reservoirs dedicated to the supply of water to the population, which of course rely on the regular runoff of the autumn and winter. In any case, some drought also exists on the mountains during the summer, since precipitation in this season is basically absent as in the lowlands.
In order to validate the previous water balance in terms of precipitation and PET, the results of a more sophisticated method have
been examined. The data provided from the website
These results reveal the following:
For the mesh point near the Mallorca airport (components of the water
balance and the balance itself are displayed in Fig. 7) the precipitation
values used by the models are much higher than those observed at the
airport. As an example, the observed mean annual value (1981–2010) is 411.3 mm,
while the same rainfall product used by the models is 597.4 mm. Regarding
EVT, the model ensemble mean values are higher than those obtained at the
Mallorca airport for PET using the Thornthwaite formula, especially in
summer. The monthly standard deviations are very high (that is, large
differences among the different models). The PET for the Mallorca airport
lies within the ensemble spread region. Regarding the water balance, and
accepting 100 mm as saturation threshold for the soil, saturation in the
Earth2Observe data is obtained during December, January and February and may
be due to the high precipitation values ingested in the models. Dryness is
obtained in July and August and very low water reserve values in June and
September. In the former results, a remarkable water deficit is obtained in
September (Fig. 6), because the temperatures are still high. For the grid point near Menorca airport (not shown), the monthly values
of precipitation used by the models are much more similar to those observed
at the airport (registered annual average of 548.6 mm versus 601.2 mm in the
models). The EVT shows a behavior similar to that at the grid point near the
airport of Mallorca: values are greater than those of PET obtained from the
Menorca airport data using the Thornthwaite expression, and there is a large
spread among the eight models. The calculated PET values are also well
encompassed by the ensemble dispersion band. Regarding the water balance,
saturation of the soil is obtained in January and February and a value close
to saturation in December. Dryness is also obtained in July and August.
These results are very similar to those obtained directly in our study for
the Menorca airport. For the grid point close to the Ibiza airport (not shown), the average
monthly precipitation values used by the models are also significantly
higher than those registered at the Ibiza airport (observed annual mean of
411.1 mm versus 497.2 mm in the models). Again the average EVT values of
the ensemble are larger than PET values given by the Thornthwaite's
expression at the Ibiza airport. The inter-model spread is very high.
Regarding the water balance, saturation of the soil is not reached in any
month; in contrast, dryness is present during May, June, July and August.
These results are in agreement with the results obtained directly with the
airport data.
In conclusion, it seems that the simple method used in the paper is
sufficient to obtain a clear representation of the drought object of the
study.
As in Fig. 6 but for the hydrologic year 2015–2016.
Accumulated precipitation from November to January at the Mallorca airport.
As already mentioned, the hydrological year 2015–2016 was characterized by a negative anomaly with respect to the reference period (Fig. 5). Other hydrological years exhibit greater negative anomalies, but it was the widespread deficit of precipitation during 2015–2016 what characterizes the hazardous effects of this drought event. Figure 8 presents the hydrological balance for Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza airports corresponding to that hydrological year. For these water balances, daily PET has been calculated using the Hargreaves method (Hargreaves and Samani, 1985). The monthly values have been obtained from the daily values. The distribution of rainfall shows significant accumulations in September due to the convective rains that affected the islands (176.4 mm in Mallorca, 181.1 in Menorca and 139.6 in Ibiza). The quite low rainfall recorded during the rest of the hydrologic year, particularly during the rest of the autumn and the whole winter, is also evident. At Mallorca airport the precipitation during November 2015 to January 2016 was 25.6 mm, which represents the lowest value among the 43 considered hydrologic years (Fig. 9). Similarly, the total precipitation recorded during December 2015 was 0.2 mm, the lowest of this month for the whole period 1973–2016. At Menorca airport the accumulated precipitation from November 2015 to January 2016 was 45 mm, also the lowest quantity recorded in a hydrologic year. The precipitation for December 2015 was 2.1 mm, again the minimum record for this month during the period 1973–2016. In Ibiza the situation was similarly extreme, since 35.2 mm was the precipitation recorded for November–January, the lowest for the 43 analyzed hydrologic years, and only 0.7 mm was registered in December 2015 (only surpassed by the 0.2 mm recorded in 1974).
For the Mallorca airport (Fig. 8) it is observed that, during the month of October, the water that was stored in the soil as consequence of the heavy precipitation events of September was already consumed; during the rest of the year there is a deficit. The lack of precipitation during the winter months implies a very dry soil on sunny days and a rise of temperatures established in spring.
Something similar happens in Ibiza, where the water deficit starts a bit later than in Mallorca as a consequence of the rainy early autumn (September and October) but where the abnormal lack of winter rains is also quite remarkable. In Menorca the situation is to some extent similar: the deficit begins in March, although the winter precipitation was also very scarce.
The Thornthwaite approach applied to obtain PET monthly climatic values uses the monthly mean temperatures provided by AEMET for the period 1981–2010. The aim is to build a reference water balance for a comparison with the particular water balance of the hydrological year 2015–2016. For this hydrological year, the PET monthly values have been calculated from the daily values obtained by the Hargreaves method. Some comparison between the two methods for this year is necessary to fully justify the reference to the climatic water balance. A comparison between both methods was made. Specifically, monthly PET values using the Thornthwaite method were calculated for the hydrological years 2014–2015 and 2015–2016 at the E1 site in Mallorca (see Fig. 1). Analogous monthly values were obtained from the daily PET values given by the Hargreaves formula. The E1 station is located in the most arid region of the island. The two time series show a correlation coefficient of 0.9 (see Fig. 10). For the warmer (colder) months the Thornthwaite method reveals larger (lower) monthly PET values than the other approach. In any case, given the high value of the correlation coefficient, the obtained reference or climatic water balance can be effectively compared with the one calculated for the 2015–2016 hydrological year.
Comparing the water balances of 2015–2016 (Fig. 8) with the climatic water balances (Fig. 6) at the three airports, notable differences during the autumn and winter are found. In the climatic balance the beginning of autumn shows a water deficit that is rapidly reversed during the rest of autumn and winter. Winter rains develop the reserves for the ground, since the summer is extremely dry. Only at the Menorca airport does this storage exceed the 100 mm threshold and therefore surface runoff and infiltration are produced. The lack of rainfall in the Balearic Islands, especially during the extreme winter of 2015–2016, gives an idea, when analyzed in terms of the water balance, of the hydrological stress to which the local vegetation was subjected. This deficit of precipitation during the winter in the Mediterranean area has been related to some more general droughts observed in Europe (Vautard et al., 2007).
It is interesting to display some other areas of Mallorca that were affected by a still more intense drought, again in terms of their water balances. Figure 11 shows the water balance for 2015–2016 obtained from the data at three automatic meteorological stations located in the south, central and northern parts of Mallorca (see Fig. 1). It can be observed that at the southernmost station (E1) the precipitation throughout the year was lower than the PET, indicating that the water deficit was accumulating during the whole hydrological year. The intense rains that affected the airport location in September did not occur in this area. The lack of precipitation in winter is remarkable. The accumulated drought that reached the always dry summer was very severe and had dramatic consequences on the vegetation types possessing shallow roots, as well as on some trees, especially almond, whose fruit maturation had to develop under unfavorable conditions.
The precipitation regime in the north of Mallorca (E3) was very similar to that of the southern region. Rainfall was also lower than PET during all the months of the hydrological year. In the center of the island (E2) the situation was not very different, although during the month of September the precipitation was enough to surpass the PET. The rainfall and the evaporation regimes resemble those at the airport. The convective rains of early autumn also reached the center of the island, but the profound lack of rainfall in winter was a constant that is repeated at all locations, supposing that evaporation rates permanently exceed precipitation, a feature clearly divergent from what is climatologically expected.
The hydrological year 2015–2016 was characterized by very intense rainfall events in September followed by a persistent lack of rainy situations for the rest of the period. This begs the question of the role of runoff, especially when the season starts with heavy precipitation, on soil dried out by the summer; in these conditions much less water will infiltrate and thus recharge soil moisture. There is an added problem for an accurate computation of the water balance when measurements on the runoff are not available, as is the case in our study. There are very few measurements of runoff in streams of the Balearics, all of them belonging only to special campaigns and always before 2014. Note that in the Balearic Islands there are no permanent rivers. In addition, no information about the episode can be obtained from the Earth2Observe web page, since model data extend only until 2012.
However, the runoff coefficient for a nearby stream basin to the Mallorca
airport (few kilometers away) was estimated by García et al. (2017),
based on observed stream flows for the 1977–2009 period. The estimated runoff
coefficient was as low as 0.03. This result ensures that the conversion of
precipitation into surface runoff is quite low for this nearby basin.
Furthermore, no substantial changes are found in the spatial distribution of
the physiography and hydrology of the stream basin where the meteorological
station is located. We can safely assume that almost all precipitation is
infiltrated and that the
Comparison of the monthly PET obtained by the Thornthwaite and Hargreaves methods at E1 station (see Fig. 1) for the hydrological years 2014–15 and 2015–2016.
As in Fig. 8 but for the three additional locations in Mallorca (E1, E2 and E3 in Fig. 1).
During the winter of 2015–2016 the North Atlantic was especially active
cyclonically speaking. Many deep depressions developed above latitudes
45–50
Mean geopotential height at 500 hPa for November 2015–January 2016 (source NCEP/NOAA reanalysis).
The above meteorological situation is unfavorable for any significant occurrence of rainfall in the western Mediterranean and particularly in the Balearic Islands. The most favorable rainfall conditions in the islands are linked with the evolution of cyclonic disturbances at mid–upper tropospheric levels which give rise to secondary depressions at surface over the Mediterranean and easterly moist flows impinging over the Balearic Islands (Romero et al., 1999). Atlantic disturbances crossing central Europe, even involving active fronts, generally produce little precipitation along the Spanish Mediterranean coast and in the Balearic Islands, in any case just affecting the northern half of the islands. Figure 13 shows that during the months of November 2015 to January 2016, when the precipitation in the Balearics was practically null, there was a strong positive anomaly of geopotential at 500 hPa over the western Mediterranean, a circulation pattern entirely inhibiting the generation of any type of precipitation system.
Geopotential height anomalies at 500 hPa for September 2015 and for November 2015–January 2016, referring to the reference period 1981–2010 (source NCEP/NOAA reanalysis).
Geopotential height anomalies at 500 hPa for November 2008–January 2009 with respect to the reference period 1981–2010 (source NCEP/NOAA reanalysis).
It was previously reported that during September 2015 intense precipitation happened on all three islands. Figure 10 shows that the atmospheric circulation during this month was characterized by the presence of lows at 500 hPa, indicated by the nucleus of negative anomaly affecting western Europe and the western Mediterranean. This pattern is dynamically favorable for the generation of heavy rainfall situations slightly downstream, over the Spanish Mediterranean coast and the Balearic Islands (Romero et al., 1999).
The average conditions displayed in Fig. 13 show the radical change of the
circulation that occurred between September and November 2015. The pattern
of September corresponds, at low levels, with the persistence of
meridional flows over the north Atlantic and low NAO values (
As a contrasting situation, the hydrological year 2008–2009 can be considered a
wet case (see Fig. 5). During the months of November to January, 214 mm at
the Mallorca Airport, 303 mm at the Menorca Airport and 187 mm at the Ibiza
Airport were recorded. Figure 14 shows the geopotential anomaly at 500 hPa
from November 2008 to January 2009. A notable negative anomaly centered over
the western Mediterranean can be observed, resulting in a completely opposite
pattern to that of 2015–2016 (Fig. 13). The values of the NAO index for
these months were negative or low (November
The characteristics of the recent drought that occurred in the Balearic Islands during the 2015–2016 hydrological year (September to August) have been presented. The analysis was carried out in terms of the particular hydrologic balance for this year using data from six meteorological stations to determine the potential evapotranspiration and to estimate the actual evaporation. These water balances have been compared against those corresponding to the long-term climatic conditions for the reference period 1981–2010. A comparison of the climatic water balance calculated with the empirical expressions against the balance deduced from eight models used by the European Earth2Observe project show some differences. Most of these differences can be attributed to the greater values of precipitation ingested in the models and the high variability of the simulated evaporation and runoff. However, the calculated values of PET lie within the spread interval of the models.
The analyzed hydrologic year reveals a profound precipitation deficit during the winter, such that the potential evapotranspiration surpassed the precipitation practically the whole year, except in September when at some stations the precipitation exceeded the evaporation. The recorded precipitation from November 2015 to January 2016 was the lowest for this period at the three airports of the Balearic Islands for the 43 considered hydrologic years. The precipitation of December was also unappreciable in all three islands. Accordingly, the soil could not store any water to face the spring, when insolation hours and temperatures increased. This resulted in a lack of any water reserves during 2015–2016, an aspect totally anomalous compared with an average winter, for which certain levels of moisture can be maintained in the soil until June in Mallorca and Ibiza and until July in Menorca.
We verified that the meteorological situation during the anomalous 2015–2016 winter was dominated by a very marked westerly flow over the North Atlantic, with high values of the NAO index. This situation caused intense precipitations and anomalously warm temperatures in Ireland and England. In contrast, precipitation at lower latitudes, and particularly in the western Mediterranean, was very scarce.
The identification of anomalous circulation patterns in seasonal or climate prediction models can be a mechanism for anticipating drought situations and stimulate planning and mitigation measures in a region like the Mediterranean, where water demand is high, especially at the time of the year when precipitation is scarce. It is also a promising line of research for purposes of agricultural planning and conservation of the current vegetation.
Temperature and precipitation data used in this work were recorded by the Spanish Meteorological Agency (AEMET). The agency can provide data under request.
The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
The weather analyses correspond to the NCEP/NOAA reanalysis database
(