As Earth warms, more 'flash droughts' suck soil, plants dry

FILE - A sunken boat is exposed by receding water levels on Lake Lanier as U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett looks on in Flowery Branch, Ga., Oct. 26, 2016. A new study finds that climate change is making droughts faster and more furious — and especially one fast-moving kind of drought that can take farmers by surprise. (AP Photo/David Goldman, File)

Climate change is making droughts faster and more furious, especially a specific fast-developing heat-driven kind that catch farmers by surprise, a new study found.

The study in Thursday’s found droughts in general are being triggered faster. But it also showed that a special and particularly nasty sudden kind — called “flash droughts†by experts — is casting an ever bigger crop-killing footprint.

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