-
The Washington Post published an article this week which explained why people differ in their interpretations of climate data trends. Trends are highly biased by which time period you pick to calculate the trend, and this article explains why we can have both a short-term cooling or hiatus in warming trends at the same time…
-
Have you ever wondered what is the average hottest day of the year? Turns out it depends on where in the Southeast you live. This map from the National Climatic Data Center shows that people in Georgia experience their hottest day in mid-July while folks in southern Florida and in northwest Alabama experience it several…
-
EarthSky blog has a good description of why the hottest days of summer lag behind the maximum sunlight. It has to do with thermal inertia, the fact that it takes time for the sun to warm up land and water. For the same reason, the hottest temperature in an average sunny day is not at…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
The Office of the State Climatologist in North Carolina recently posted a blog entry on the four main factors for plant growth, which I linked to here a while back. Here is the second part of this blog, addressing the impacts of weather on NC agriculture. Many of these comments are relevant to other parts…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
Today is the first day of astronomical summer, as the sun reaches its highest point in the noon sky. Climatologists don’t use June 21 as the first day of climatological summer, though, since for most people the warmest temperatures align best with the June 1-August 31 period. But it is still a good chance to…
Posted in: Climate outlooks -
Scientists at the University of Florida have created a new model that may help growers plant at optimal times and avoid drought. The model, called ARID (Agricultural Reference Index for Drought), predicts water loss for crops like cotton, peanuts, soybeans and corn, using weather variables like temperature, humidity, wind and solar energy and translates that…
-
Reuters news service reported yesterday that desertification is affecting about a fourth of India’s land. Agricultural lands are becoming degraded and threatening food security in this highly populated country. The main causes of the desertification are overgrazing and heavy land use coupled with changes in rainfall over time. Some of the areas most affected are…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news