Science Source
Increased variability of tornado occurrence in the United States
- States that whether or not climate change has had an impact on the occurrence of tornadoes in the United States has become a question of high public and scientific interest, but changes in how tornadoes are reported have made it difficult to answer it convincingly
- Shows that, excluding the weakest tornadoes, the mean annual number of tornadoes has remained relatively constant, but their variability of occurrence has increased since the 1970s
- Results indicate this is due to a decrease in the number of days per year with tornadoes combined with an increase in days with many tornadoes, leading to greater variability on annual and monthly time scales and changes in the timing of the start of the tornado season
Related Content
Headline
Mar 29, 2023 | Associated Press
Tornado-spawning storms may get worse due to warming
Headline
Apr 6, 2022 | Washington Post
2022 generated most March tornadoes on record in U.S.
Headline
Dec 16, 2021 | CNN
Climate change: How the crisis is affecting tornadoes
Headline
Dec 16, 2021 | The Washington Post
Historic wind storm slams central U.S., unleashes rare December tornadoes