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Globetrotting Sahara sand takes rain to California

Particles blown into the air in Africa and Asia cross the Pacific and increase rain and snow in the Sunshine State
Blame Sahara dust for the weather in San Francisco
Blame Sahara dust for the weather in San Francisco
(Image: Robert Galbraith/Reuters)

If the Sahara gets any drier, it could make California wetter. That鈥檚 because the dust and microbes that help form clouds can travel around the world on narrow air streams called 鈥渁tmospheric rivers鈥, causing rain.

The particles, or aerosols, help clouds form by acting as seeds for water vapour to condense around. Atmospheric rivers carry this dust-laden water until they hit mountains, such as California鈥檚 Sierra Nevada, where their cargo turns to precipitation.

To see how these rivers affect weather, and colleagues at the University of California, San Diego, flew planes through six storms over the Sierra Nevada in 2011, gathering particles from the air. They also collected samples of rain and snow.

The team was able to identify the type and origin of the particles by analysing their chemistry and using satellite data to model where the storms鈥 air currents began. The storms picked up the vast majority of particles over Asia. In some cases, dust had been picked up earlier, over the Sahara and the Middle East.

In two storms with otherwise identical conditions, the one containing more dust was much wetter, suggesting that in future, extra dust from desertification and activities such as agriculture could make far-flung places wetter.

Unexpectedly, microbes made up 10 per cent of the particles collected. 鈥淭he atmosphere is a global conveyor belt for microorganisms,鈥 and they may be far more diverse than we previously thought, says David J. Smith of NASA鈥檚 Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

The role of aerosols in clouds is one of the largest uncertainties in climate modelling, says of the Desert Research Institute in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Mapping the geographical sources of these aerosols could allow researchers to better understand the global impacts of the dust stirred up by human land use, biomass burning and desertification.

Journal reference: Science,

Topics: Climate change / Microbiology / Sahara desert / weather