Climate and Ag in the news
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Savannah Now published an article discussing the increase in coastal flooding during especially high tides, and notes that this type of flooding is becoming more common as sea levels rise. The sea levels across the world are rising from a combination of expansion of warmer ocean water and melting of ice sheets in the Arctic. …
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Two articles this week described changes in the ranges of birds due to changes in climate, which can impact the range of food supplies and nesting material. In Watt’s Up With That, guest bloggers Pat Michaels and Chip Knappenberger described the movement of songbirds such as the Eastern bluebird to new locations farther north, expanding…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
National Public Radio broadcast a story today about problems some California citizens are having with their wells, which they blame on pumping at farms close to their houses. These people, many of them retirees or farm workers on limited incomes living in areas not served by public water supplies, depend on their wells to provide…
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Since it is fall, it is not surprising that stories about this year’s harvest are filling agricultural newsletters. Many of those stories link this year’s harvest conditions to the climate of the past growing season. Rome Ethredge noted in his Seminole Crop News blog that cotton harvest is well underway. The crop looks pretty good…
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Al Dutcher, the Nebraska State Climatologist and a self-proclaimed conservative, as well as other Nebraska scientists, have been tasked by their state to do a study of changes in climate over time and its impact on agriculture and other economic drivers of the state. However, because of an amendment put into the funding bill by…
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Dr. Marshall Shepherd, an atmospheric science professor at UGA, published a guest posting on the Capital Weather Gang blog at the Washington Post on the recent Ebola outbreak and what meteorologists have learned from challenges like Superstorm Sandy. If you deal with weather or other emergencies, you may be interested in his commentary, which can…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
Yesterday NOAA issued their latest winter weather outlook. The story is here and the maps are below. Their forecast is based on the likely (67 percent chance) development of a weak El Nino in the next two months which would steer the subtropical jet stream across southern Georgia and Alabama and Florida. While an El…