ST. LOUIS (AP) — The worst U.S.
drought in decades has deepened again after more than a month of
encouraging reports of slowly improving conditions, a drought-tracking
consortium said Wednesday, as scientists struggled for an explanation
other than a simple lack of rain.
While
more than half of the continental U.S. has been in a drought since
summer, rain storms had appeared to be easing the situation week by week
since late September. But that promising run ended with Wednesday's
weekly U.S. Drought Monitor report, which showed increases in the portion of the country in drought and the severity of it.
The
report showed that 60.1 percent of the lower 48 states were in some
form of drought as of Tuesday, up from 58.8 percent the previous week.
The amount of land in extreme or exceptional drought — the two worst
classifications — increased from 18.3 percent to 19.04 percent.
The Drought
Monitor's map tells the story, with dark red blotches covering the
center of the nation and portions of Texas and the Southeast as an
indication of where conditions are the most intense. Those areas are
surrounded by others in lesser stages of drought, with only the
Northwest, Florida and a narrow band from New England south to
Mississippi escaping.
A federal meteorologist cautioned that
Wednesday's numbers shouldn't be alarming, saying that while drought
usually subsides heading into winter, the Drought Monitor report merely
reflects a week without rain in a large chunk of the country.
"The
places that are getting precipitation, like the Pacific Northwest, are
not in drought, while areas that need the rainfall to end the drought
aren't getting it," added Richard Heim,
a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's National Climatic Data Center. "I would expect the
drought area to expand again" by next week since little rain is forecast
in the Midwest in coming days.
He said there was no clear, scientific explanation for why the drought was lingering or estimate for how long it would last."What's driving the weather? It's kind of a car with no one at the steering wheel," Heim said. "None of the atmospheric indicators are really strong. A lot of them are tickling around the edges and fighting about who wants to be king of the hill, but none of them are dominant."
The biggest area of exceptional drought, the most severe of the five categories listed by the Drought Monitor, centers over the Great Plains. Virtually all of Nebraska is in a deep drought, with more than three-fourths in the worst stage. But Nebraska, along with the Dakotas to the north, could still see things get worse "in the near future," the USDA's Eric Luebehusen wrote in Wednesday's update.
The drought
also has been intensifying in Kansas, the top U.S. producer of winter
wheat. It also is entirely covered by drought, and the area in the worst
stage rose nearly 4 percentage points to 34.5 percent as of Tuesday.
Much of that increase was in southern Kansas, where rainfall has been 25
percent of normal over the past half year.
After
a summer in which farmers watched helpless as their corn dried up in
the heat and their soybeans became stunted, many are now worrying about
their winter wheat.
It has
come up at a rate on par with non-drought years, but the quality of the
drop doesn't look good, according to the USDA. Nearly one-quarter of the
winter wheat that germinated is in poor or very poor condition, an
increase of 2 percentage points from the previous week and 9 percentage
points worse than the same time in 2011. Forty-two percent of the
plantings are described as in fair shape, the same as last week.
Farmers
who might normally irrigate in such circumstances worry about low water
levels in the rivers and reservoirs they use, and many are hoping for
snow to ease the situation. But it would take a lot. About 20 inches of
snow equals just an inch of actual water, and many areas have rain
deficits of a foot or more.
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