Aaron Kennedy, an assistant atmospheric sciences professor, recently encountered an atmosphere unlike anything he normally finds in his field work on the prevalence of
extreme weather patterns around the world: the halls of Congress.
This warm condition, known as El Niño, affects the local aquatic environment, but also spurs
extreme weather patterns around the world, from flooding in California to droughts in Australia.
Not exact matches
Drastically different
weather patterns, shorter growing seasons,
extreme weather, and many other changes pose daunting problems for smallholder farmers
around the
world — especially in the tropics.