Kind: captions Language: en [Music] i'm walking into the farmer's market at the ferry building in san francisco on this lovely saturday morning we're going to talk to some farmers about drought how it's affecting them and what the public needs to know you know we're all under rationing now and it's only july the creek is really really low this year has been the hardest year in the past decade and we have only yielded around 20 of our crops well it's just the sheer quantity of water that it takes to grow stone fruit it takes to grow apples it takes to grow almonds and i think the quantity is just something that you know the normal you know city dweller has no concept of a lot of the customers have seen an increase in prices they don't really understand that our whole life and farm relies on the weather and when there's no rain then we have less product and just to barely stay afloat definitely fearful for the future of farming so you've just heard farmers annabelle emily molly and adam talk about how they're struggling in these dry times but it's not just the bay area it's all through the western half of the u.s almost all of arizona is dealing with drought with more than half of the state facing exceptional drought conditions the largest reservoir in the united states is running on empty lake mead behind iconic hoover dam is at its lowest level in nearly 90 years that means water shortages higher fire risks farmers in parts of new mexico say they are being asked not to water their crops 100 percent of california is now in a drought and if you could believe it it could get even worse it's hot and dry and much of the western us is experiencing a historic mega drought now there's a couple questions we gotta ask like how are scientific innovations helping us adapt to and prepare for droughts like this one particularly their effects on our food supply also who's especially vulnerable and how does all this affect those of us who don't live in drought-prone areas because guess what it does this is nova now where we use science to quench your curiosity as we explore all these headlines i'm alok patel [Music] my time at the farmer's market helped me see even more starkly how this mega drought can affect our food security so even if there's no drought where you live it impacts all of us and in this world of smartphones smart assistance and gps navigation can smart techs save our food from drought and farmers aren't the only ones thinking about this issue some really concerned and tech savvy teens are rolling up their sleeves too so i live in the central valley in california when we're hit with a drought and being an agricultural focused area it really affects us like yeah my name is john estrada i'm 16 years old my name is arya chan i'm 18 years old arya lives in new jersey i go to india every year because my grandparents and a lot of my family live there and um when you're driving through there there's massive feels that they have problems with feeding everybody when you see that these fields that you know have all the potential to solve these problems or just sitting with wilted plants but their lack of really advancements in their irrigation has prevented them from being able to efficiently use their water and therefore keep reserves of their water so john and arya are budding scientists they won top awards in this year's regeneron international science and engineering fair with a set of impressive projects to address farming's drought issues here's john again one of the biggest issues in farming is it's almost guesswork when to water your plants it's like you could try to water your plants based on how you think your plants are doing the problem with that is once you start seeing the telltale signs of drought stress in plants it's already too late your yield is affected so what i'm hoping to solve is to prevent over watering implants but to also prevent a loss in crop yield john's project improves on existing tools to track plant thirst with a special camera and a new measurement model essentially what my project does is uses pixel by pixel measurements from the canopy temperatures of the plants and then it uses red green and blue light wavelengths and as well as soil moisture data and these are used to create an artificial intelligence model that will predict drought stress this model is one he developed the ai drought assessment model that's ai as in artificial intelligence which is computer simulating human thinking but faster and more accurately and john just calls it ada for short it's easier and he found that his ada model is just as accurate as the current standard at measuring drought stress the crop water stress index but because john's approach uses more direct indicators from the plant it can alert you to drought stress more quickly so you can adjust your irrigation even earlier also to take his measurements john built a robotic arm kind of cool the robotic arm was used so that every time i took a picture it would be at the same exact spot the same exact distance from the plant so my measurements were completely accurate there was no margin for error so the more accurate your measurements are of drought stress the better you can assess how thirsty the plants are and the less water you waste arya developed his own approach to address this same problem in developing countries where technological and financial resources are more limited instead of the farmer having to make their own adjustments and use their intuition to figure out how much water they think each plant should be given um really computer should be deciding that so he'd have a drone fly around taking measures of crop health and then send that over to a computer to analyze which then tells farmers how to customize their water use there's a term for the kind of innovations john and arya are working on precision agriculture that means applying advanced technologies to target your farming practices more effectively like drone surveillance or artificial intelligence yeah that's what the kids are into these days when i was in high school my science project was swabbing random parts of the skull to see how much bacteria i could grow but to be fair i didn't have the robots and drones to play with so it's a little different now imagine just what kind of precision agriculture you could come up with if you had a super computer which brings us to our next guest hello everybody my name is caillou guan i'm a blue waters associate professor at university of illinois at ubana champaign i read that your grandfather wanted you to be an astronaut that's true that's a that's a true story so my chinese name is kaiju and literally that means to develop the universe um and then my grandpa really hopefully you know he give me that name because he want me to be an astronaut i was always very grateful and it's inspiring well guan is not an astronaut he's an ecohydrologist studying how plant growth interacts with the environment he does his research in the so-called corn belt of the midwest and it's a fitting name because one-third of the world's corn and soybean is produced there so he might not be working in space but he's teamed up with the folks who do i'm working with nasa and i got a lot of honors and awards for nasa focusing on our planet he's one of the very select few who gets to use blue waters for his research that's the name of one of the biggest supercomputers ever built at any us university why do i need to use a supercomputer to address a crop problem we actually use satellite remote sensing data that you collected from the space a lot of them from by nasa or european space agency the remote sensing data he's talking about are from super high resolution images showing detailed information about farmlands millions of gigabytes of data from multiple satellites that have been looking down at earth and recording the conditions of crops combined with data collected on the ground it's a gigantic data set one you need a supercomputer for we also use models to do simulations at individual farm level and then in champaign county which is where i located at this moment there are tens of thousands of fields just in one county multiply this by thousands of counties in the nation in the corn belt and then so it's a millions of fields that are required to be calculated so this is precision ag on steroids how does crunching all this data work to help farmers well you could analyze a field then you'd come up with a targeted prescription for your field under different conditions for exactly how much say fertilizer to use and when and where to apply it that save you money but also protect the environment by reducing greenhouse gas emissions from fertilizers so all this gonna help farmers at the field scale we enable that precision practice on the ground [Music] guan's team is now testing better ways to irrigate based on a finer understanding of the way drought affects plants you know traditional way of defining drought is based on the amount of rainfall and then the amount of the soil moisture in the on the ground but there is also a very important component that sometimes has been understudied and overlooked if the atmosphere become very dry when the atmosphere is dry it sucks water out of the plant and the plant needs more water but plants have a clever way of regulating themselves through tiny pores on their leaves called stomata and then so plant has the ability to adjust if the atmosphere is very dry then the model is smart enough they tend to close their stomata and by doing so plants reduce the water use but that has a side effect because this the model is also well planned to get the co2 in to grow for photosynthesis getting less co2 means less photosynthesis which is how plants make the food they need to grow that impact seems to be more directly related to the loss of the yield and that's one more way climate change is bad news because the hotter it is the drier the atmosphere causing more stressed out plants the good news is this new understanding of drought allows guan's team to develop even more precise approaches to managing crops water needs now this may sound counterintuitive but guan's research has found that sometimes even when atmospheric dryness is high soil moisture can still be relatively normal in those situations the traditional irrigation solution may not ask you to irrigate because they only measure things based on the soil moisture threshold but with atmospheric dryness plants are going to actually respond um by using more water we suggest that to put more water into the system in those cases and then the similar condition is that when soil moisture is actually relatively low but the atom's fuel is not very dry the plants then won't be so thirsty and in those cases the irrigation amount can be actually reduced than before so by factoring in the atmospheric dryness along with soil moisture we can design smarter irrigation systems you can actually save water by 10 or even further and without sacrificing your crop yield this could be a smarter way to both reduce water use but also help you know crop fight drought this all makes sense but as you can imagine precision agriculture technology isn't something you can just go walk into a shop and buy like another piece of machinery so scientists like guan are working with farmers groups to make this tech more widely available to what extent is this already happening in farms right now like so what extent are all the technologies we're talking about being employed if you think about irrigation just as an example um probably only five percent farmers uh have a sensor on the ground uh and then you know probably only about 20 to 30 percent of the farmers have some you know guidance from you know some irrigation companies so in the equipment companies majority of the farmers still depend on the weather forecast or their neighbor suggestion or their neighbors action to make their decision so in other words that there is a wide space for improvement so even though the so-called ag tech development it's kind of booming right now farmers adoption of the precision act technology is still pretty low and in brazil in other asian countries or in africa like the adoption rate about any precision act tools are extremely low at this moment guan thinks governments could help by offering incentives for adopting these methods but he thinks the technology itself isn't quite ready for prime time so i challenged guan to envision this tool i believe for seeing is believing you know just imagine that if we have an app in your in your iphone that if you open the app you can instantly see a field that you are working on you are able to see that field and you able to look at the past history of that field in the past multiple years and then also provide a few simple information but easy to consume type of information like at this moment what's your crop stress condition and how much is because of the amount of water in the soil how much is because of the dryness condition in the atmosphere you want to first build a trust like they they know that they are not looking at like something made up illusion right guan says if he had a magic wand he'd give all farmers a special piece of tech it would show them the unintended consequences of all their past actions on a loss of yield and harm to the environment then it would give them customized tools to do better see our landscape is changing towards a more you know smarter and a more sustainable way of managing the landscape i think that's gonna be the ultimate goal for me and and for a lot of my colleagues making technology for coping with drought accessible to those who need it is one thing but there are communities who are especially vulnerable to drought and they're doing their best to use the tools they have indigenous peoples throughout the world are more susceptible to climate change impacts when we come back we'll hear from a water management expert from the navajo nation there are over 570 tribal nations in the united states and not all native americans have the same language the culture and tradition and for the navajos we we don't dance for rain but we do pray for rain crystal tully cordova is based in rock springs new mexico and she's a principal hydrologist with the navajo nation department of water resources in the water management branch and when we think about indigenous people there's a strong spirituality component that is a part of our identity [Music] that's her introducing herself in the traditional way of the navajo people also known as dinet i am of the bitter water clan born for the tango people clan my maternal grandfather's clan is the yucca fruit strung on a line and my paternal grandfather's plan is the water that flows together first of all that's beautiful thank you for sharing that you literally originated from a water clan and you went on to become a water researcher in hydrology what's the significance of water for the navajo nation and the net philosophy there's a phrase simply put in english it is water is life but when you think about the literal translation meaning water is our vitality it provides our livelihood so it's everything from providing the medicinal plants that we need providing nourishment for our bodies and a large portion of our bodies are made up of water the navajo nation is located in the southwestern part of the united states it's in the four corners region within the area of arizona new mexico and utah and it's the tribe with both the largest land area and largest population in the united states you know i'm in california and we're also facing you know kind of a scary drought season what image comes to your mind when when i say the word drought the landscape so being able to see how continuous drought over the past 20 plus years has impacted the navajo nation evidence of this are definitely the wildlife migration impacts to water haulers as well as public water systems water haulers are people who don't have pipe water in their homes so they need to go to a water point to collect their water in containers to use for everyday tasks like hygiene cooking drinking or taking care of pets or livestock it's important to have a water point in your community because if you don't then you then rely on unregulated water sources and the navajo nation has had legacy mining issues that have impacted water and so it's important that people have quality water that they know won't be harmful to their health because there are unregulated waters throughout the navajo nation that have high uranium and high arsenic [Music] as we've already heard lacking water can really impact the food supply which is already precarious for the navajo the navajo nation is also a food desert in addition to being like a high mountain desert we only have 13 grocery stores for an area similar in size to west virginia and when you think about that it's pretty astonishing so therefore you know many of us have a desire to grow our own food and produce and be able to can and dry food so that we can prepare and make it through the winter although a lot of the navajo nation land is arid they traditionally have grown their own crops the three sister crops that we continue to grow and those are corn beans and squash the corn is a part of our ceremonies as well the pollen from the corn are used for prayers but also the corn itself is are not only used for consumption but also used for things like an earthen cake during a puberty ceremony when a navajo woman goes from a transition of a girl to a woman tuli cordova wants to make sure we value traditional knowledge as well for indigenous people we've been here a long time and we don't need science to be able to tell us that things are changing even throughout my own time i've noticed that change with regards to drought to where natural lakes that we used to see on the top of the chiska mountain some of the higher elevation areas in the navajo nation those lakes are no longer there they're more just natural depressions without holding any water at all to better understand drought we need to understand the water cycles first now earth's water is in constant flux connecting the ocean land and atmosphere now visualize this water on the earth evaporates rises into the atmosphere cools and condenses into rain or snow in clouds then it falls again to the surface as precipitation and collects in the ground rivers lakes streams and the oceans [Music] in the navajo nation we do have some perennial streams we have ephemeral streams perennial means a stream that runs year round and ephemeral is a stream that runs only after precipitation we have precipitation two times a year in the summertime as well as the winter the summer precipitation also goes by a jazzier name the north american monsoon we're looking forward to the monsoon in the navajo nation it's pretty hot and dry so it's important to have that understanding that all water is connected evapotranspiration contributes to precipitation which can contribute to the flows and ephemeral and perennial streams while also helping recharge groundwater with less precipitation stream flows decline and the levels of water in lakes and reservoirs decrease when dry weather goes on and water supplies are not refilled an area enters what we know as drought actually there are different types of drought if you ever look up something called a u.s drought monitor you can see that there's different magnitudes of drought there's also different lengths of drought the u.s drought monitor is a map that shows parts of the country that are in drought you've probably seen this map being shown on the news it's that map with yellow orange and red blobs and it uses five classifications abnormally dry showing areas that may be going into or coming out of drought and four levels of drought itself moderate severe extreme and exceptional you can check it for free at droughtmonitor.unl.edu and it updates every thursday according to the drought monitor 96 of the navajo nation is experiencing extreme to exceptional drought that's basically as bad as it gets so bone dry that's also bad when we think about fuel for wildfires the navajo nation department of emergency management has coordinated their community's response to drought since 1988. they have a drought contingency plan that combines long-term and short-term mitigation strategies it guides the navajo residents to be proactive before a drought even begins because of the large area and the limited infrastructure it's difficult to be able to do real-time data because you know cell phones don't even work in some areas and we have individuals within the water monitoring and inventory group be able to drive to 85 sites throughout arizona new mexico and utah to be able to evaluate the month-to-month variation of precipitation one thing that frustrates me and i'm going to guess that it frustrates you as well is that when we're addressing the problem when it happens that we're not necessarily being preventative about it and i think sometimes you know people have a hard time identifying with a problem that doesn't affect them so like hey you know i don't feel climate change i'm good and i don't think it's real there's no drought where i live yeah i like to think about drought like a bank account and so with each precipitation event it's like putting pennies into your negative 100 or more account and we don't have enough of those precipitation events to get us out of those severe and exceptional conditions now back to dr guan in terms of the current mega drought in the west he has a few ideas the first government investment to build some good infrastructure as well as design more sustainable water management and water use uh gonna really help you know the local people to prepare for me i can develop more technology to help farmers to gain more about one drop of the irrigated water you know you just try to make it make irrigation more efficient you you better use the water um and then also better help farmers to anticipate the drought such that local people have the response time to really take some actions with the relentless news about how our planet is heating up and drying out it's tempting to give into despair but when i listen to guan's excitement about his work and his drive to come up with solutions i feel the optimism i get charged up i was it's it's a really really exciting time too that the technology reached to the time that enable this generation of scientists to start to convert the imagination to become the reality to achieve a big thing for the humanity i really i really believe so you know i think it's about the time and i also be proud about being an immigrant in this country and and so i'm i'm chinese and you know i uh i stand up for you know asian community and so stop asian hates you know that's very important yes that's very important that's very serious and i'm very proud about my uh uh origin but at the same time i think when we are talking about you know these big problems about whole planet a whole nature there's no differentiation about where you come from we should fight together as human beings [Music] nova now is a production of gbh and prx it's produced by terence bernardo ari daniel jocelyn gonzalez isabel hibbard sandra lopez monsalve and rosalind tordesillas julia core and chris schmidt are the co-executive producers of nova dante graves is director of audience development tsuki bennett is senior digital editor christina manan is associate researcher robin kasmer is science editor lorena lyon is digital production assistant and devin robbins is managing producer of podcast at gbh our theme music is by the dj who makes it rain with funky beats dj kid koala i'm alok patel we'll be back in two weeks which is plenty of time for you to learn how to use less water you can start by taking shorter showers and just avoiding baths or turning off the water while brushing your teeth shaving or doing dishes maybe you should check your faucets pipes or toilets for leaks or do less laundry try installing a water meter water your lawn only when it needs it or try planting drought-resistant trees and plants we can all do better [Music] gbh