Over the past month, historic floods have wreaked havoc across the midwestern United States, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and elsewhere. At the same time, Australia faces historic drought conditions.
While
 these may appear as opposite and separate events, they share a common 
thread. The events themselves might not have been preventable, but their
 effects could have drastically reduced.
When lands are
 mismanaged, ecosystem health suffers. Bare soils become compacted and 
lose porosity. Without vegetation, organic matter diminishes. Soils cap 
over, gravity creates runoff and water pools at the low point. Exposed 
ground heats up and moisture evaporates.
When lands are
 properly managed, ecosystems build resilience against flooding, 
drought, and so much more. We create living soils with adequate 
structure and porosity so rainfall is absorbed and utilized by plant 
roots. Trampled plant litter provides shade and cooling. Soil acts as a 
sponge for quickly absorbing rainfall, but also holding that water in 
reserve for dry periods.
Put into perspective, a 1% increase in soil organic matter allows an acre of land to store an additional 20,000 gallons of water.
 Given the frequency of these extreme weather events and their 
devastating effects, we should be looking to solutions that increase 
this incredible water-holding capacity of soil.
We may 
not be able to change how much rain falls from the sky, but we can 
change how that rain is used once it touches the ground. We can manage 
holistically and create properly functioning water cycles for resilient 
and thriving landscapes.
With 5 billion hectares of grasslands on this planet, that’s a lot of water we can put to better use.
The text above is from the excellent and informative Savory Ruminations newsletter. See the whole thing here: Flooding, drought, & functioning water cycles. 

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