File:India vegetation, natural and cultivated, favorable weather boosts Indian agriculture, April 2008.jpg
Original file (3,000 × 3,000 pixels, file size: 3.85 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
This file is from Wikimedia Commons and may be used by other projects. The description on its file description page there is shown below.
Summary
DescriptionIndia vegetation, natural and cultivated, favorable weather boosts Indian agriculture, April 2008.jpg |
English: Dark green blankets much of India in this vegetation image, indicating that plants were growing more densely than average between April 1 and April 10, 2008. The April harvest yielded a record corn and rice crop, said the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Foreign Agricultural Service.
All plants, both natural and cultivated, were thriving in the wake of abundant monsoon rains in 2007-2008. Only in northern India is the landscape brown, pointing to areas where plants were doing less well than average. Plant growth in India depends almost entirely on the strength of the annual monsoon. When the monsoon rains fail, so too do the country's crops. Good rains provide bumper crops. Beyond controlling the fate of agriculture in India, changes in the Indian monsoon helped scientists recognize the far-flung impact of the oscillating Pacific Ocean phenomena El Nino and La Nina. It was while puzzling out patterns of drought in India in the early twentieth century that Sir Gilbert Walker first noticed a change in air pressure in the South Pacific that seemed to influence the Indian monsoon. Years later, in the 1960s, Jacob Bjerknes was also studying drought in India when he connected the changes in air pressure that Walker had noticed to changes in ocean temperatures known as El Nino and La Nina. Bjerknes realized that the periodic warming and cooling of the Pacific Ocean occurred as changes in the air pressure strengthened or weakened trade winds; these changes altered weather patterns around the world. La Nina occurs when strong trade winds cool the equatorial Pacific Ocean in the east off the coast of South America, while allowing warmer water to build in the west near the Philippines and Indonesia. Its counterpoint, El Nino warms the equatorial Pacific by weakening trade winds. La Nina dominated the Pacific throughout 2007 and into 2008. Though La Nina doesn't directly control monsoon rains in India, it does influence them. La Nina tends to bring abundant monsoon rains to India, and the 2007 monsoon season was accordingly above-average. By early April 2008, plants throughout the country were responding to the plentiful water supply. In other words, the world's weather and global food supply are interconnected. Shifting weather causes bumper crops in one part of the world, while another part of the world sees crop failures. See also: 1. India's vegetation conditions by France's SPOT satellite. http://www.spot.com/web/SICORP/445-sicorp-the-spot-satellites.php 2. La Nina and Pacific Decadal Oscillation Cool the Pacific on the Earth Observatory. earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3 |
Date | |
Source | http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/view.php?id=19850 |
Author | NASA |
Licensing
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
This file is in the public domain in the United States because it was solely created by NASA. NASA copyright policy states that "NASA material is not protected by copyright unless noted". (See Template:PD-USGov, NASA copyright policy page or JPL Image Use Policy.) | ||
Warnings:
|
Items portrayed in this file
depicts
2 May 2008
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 03:08, 17 December 2013 | 3,000 × 3,000 (3.85 MB) | wikimediacommons>M Tracy Hunter | User created page with UploadWizard |
File usage
The following page uses this file:
Metadata
This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
If the file has been modified from its original state, some details may not fully reflect the modified file.
Image title |
|
---|---|
Width | 16,000 px |
Height | 10,000 px |
Bits per component |
|
Compression scheme | LZW |
Pixel composition | RGB |
Orientation | Normal |
Number of components | 3 |
Horizontal resolution | 100 dpi |
Vertical resolution | 100 dpi |
Data arrangement | chunky format |
Software used | Adobe Photoshop CS3 Macintosh |
File change date and time | 10:24, 2 May 2008 |
Color space | Uncalibrated |
Image width | 3,000 px |
Image height | 3,000 px |
Date and time of digitizing | 06:24, 2 May 2008 |
Date metadata was last modified | 06:24, 2 May 2008 |