No. In dry, dusty conditions you may see whirlwinds called dust devils. Dust devils are not tornadoes, though they may look somewhat like them. They are usually harmless.
Tornadoes require thunderstorms in order to form, so you are actually less likely to see tornadoes during a drought than at other times.
drought even though drought cause water problems tornadoes are still a big problem your house destroyed and barely have nothing left and a drought is when you barely have enough water which can cause many problems water in your house will be cut off some areas may turned to deserts animals may even adapt to areas that has warmer climate and no rain for a long time and youll have a high water bill payage that will lead to water cutting off
a drought can cause crop failure and death to people and animals
a drought can cause crop failure and death to people and animals
An asteroid from space, volcanic eruption, flooding, loss of food, or drought.
no
No. Tornadoes can be very destructive, but they do not cause air pollution.
No. Tornadoes do not cause flooding.
Based on U.S. statistics about 2% of tornadoes cause deaths which works out to about 25 killer tornadoes in an average year.
Nothing COSSES anything. There are things that CAUSE tornadoes.
We don't need tornadoes. They cause death and destruction.
Nothing. Tornadoes are a natural weather phenomena.
Tornadoes, hurricanes, severe thunderstorms, lightning, MAYBE tsunamis, and drought.