Water Cycle Diagram
The Hydrologic Cycle (also called the Water Cycle) is the continuous movement of water in the air, on the surface of and below the Earth. This cycle is the exchange of energy which influences climate. When water condenses, it releases energy and warms the environment. When water evaporates it takes energy from the surrounding environment, dropping temperatures.
Process Definitions:
Condensation
Deposition
Evaporation
Percolation
Precipitation
Sublimation
Transpiration
Drought Impact:
Hotter temperatures would cause more evaporation from both open water and the soil. As a result, river and lake levels would drop, and soils would dry out. Plants would transpire more in the heat, drawing even more water from the ground. There would be less water on and in the ground just when hot weather was increasing water demand.
Here is what happens:
Less precipitation
Drought begins when an area receives much less rain or snow than usual. That means rivers, lakes, reservoirs, and soil do not replenish the way they normally do.
Drier soil
When rainfall is limited, soil moisture drops. Plants then struggle to get the water they need. This also affects agriculture, forests, and natural habitats.
Reduced plant transpiration
Plants normally release water vapor into the air through transpiration. During drought, plants may wilt, go dormant, or die back, which means less moisture returns to the atmosphere. That can further reduce local humidity and cloud formation.
Lower streamflow and shrinking surface water
Streams, ponds, lakes, and wetlands may shrink as less runoff feeds them. Some smaller streams may dry up completely.
Less groundwater recharge
Normally, some precipitation soaks into the ground and refills aquifers. During drought, less water is available to infiltrate, so that groundwater supplies can decline, especially if people keep pumping wells heavily.
Higher temperatures can worsen it
Drought often comes with high heat. Heat increases evaporation from soil and surface water, further drying the land. Even though evaporation rises, it does not always lead to enough cloud formation or rainfall to break the drought.
Feedback loop
Drought can create a self-reinforcing cycle. Dry soils and stressed vegetation add less moisture to the air, making rainfall even less likely in some regions. In simple terms, drought weakens the water cycle by reducing the water available at nearly every stage of the cycle. There is less rain, less soil moisture, less water in rivers and lakes, less groundwater recharge, and often less moisture returning to the atmosphere from plants.
- Q: Does drought stop the water hydrologic cycle completely?
A: No. The water cycle continues, but it slows down and becomes much less effective in moving and replenishing water in a region. - Q: Why can droughts last so long?
A: Because once land, plants, and water sources dry out, it can take a long time and repeated precipitation to restore normal conditions. - Q: Does drought only affect surface water?
A: No. It affects surface water, soil moisture, plants, and groundwater.
Understanding how drought affects the hydrologic cycle helps explain why its impacts can spread across farming, ecosystems, drinking water supplies, and weather patterns.










