A website from UGA Cooperative Extension

Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast

  • Home
  • Is it the end of the Atlantic tropical season yet?

    Pam Knox

    October 10, 2021

    (UPDATE: New map as of 10:30 pm) I’ve been getting a few questions about how quiet the tropics are right now and whether we are done with the tropical season for this year. Here is the answer from Bryan Norcross, a television meteorologist from Miami with many years of experience in tropical weather. I follow…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate outlooks, Tropical weather
  • Mostly dry week ahead

    Pam Knox

    October 9, 2021

    The latest 7-day QPF map shows that after the showers in the eastern parts of the Southeast move out today, we should have a mostly dry week for nearly all of the region. The exception is eastern North and South Carolina, under the influence of a weak disturbance that could briefly become a subtropical storm…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks
  • Video: Texas dairy farmers go whole-hog to keep their cows cool in a warmer world

    Pam Knox

    October 8, 2021

    Did you know that excess heat costs the US dairy industry about $900 million per year? In this video from Yale Climate Connections, I learned that cows in Texas give a lot more milk in winter when the weather is cool than in summer, when heat is an issue. The dairy farmer in this video…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Livestock
  • NOAA: September 2021 was the 5th-warmest September on record

    Pam Knox

    October 8, 2021

    The latest monthly climate summary for September 2021 was released by NOAA today. It shows that for the continental US, this past September was the 5th warmest since records began in 1895. The Southeast was one of those areas that did not follow this pattern, and most of the Southeast was cooler than normal. This…

    Posted in: Climate summaries
  • NCSCO: Five Years Later, Five Lessons Learned from Matthew

    Pam Knox

    October 7, 2021

    The last few years have brought many tropical storms and hurricanes to the Southeast. This week marks the 5-year anniversary of Hurricane Matthew, which dropped heavy rains on the East Coast, especially eastern North and South Carolina. The damage to agriculture, infrastructure, and housing from the wind and rain was vast. Corey Davis of the…

    Posted in: Climate summaries, History, Tropical weather, Uncategorized
  • Climate Maps Show a Transformed United States

    Pam Knox

    October 6, 2021

    This ProPublica storymap is from 2020, but I ran across it today when I was working on a talk for later this week. It’s worth looking at again. The maps show some of the likely changes in climate we can expect to see over the next 50 years as the earth gets warmer. The website…

    Posted in: Climate science
  • Former NOAA scientist Suki Manabe shares Nobel Prize in Physics for pioneering climate prediction

    Pam Knox

    October 5, 2021

    Today is an exciting day for climatologists everywhere, because a climatologist has won the Nobel Prize in physics, along with two other scientists that study complex natural systems. You might not think that was very exciting, but that’s because you don’t know the history of how meteorologists and atmospheric scientists were blocked from getting Nobel…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news
«Previous Page
1 … 273 274 275 276 277 … 1,178
Next Page»

Sign up for UGA Climate list

(Get one email per day)

* = required field

Funding provided by…

USDA logo: Southeast Regional Climate Hub
UGA logo, College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences

Archives

About this blog

The “Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast” blog is provided by the Associate Dean of Extension as a service to Extension agents and agricultural producers across the Southeast US. Come here to find out information about the impacts of weather and climate on agriculture across Georgia and beyond.

Recent Posts

  • Tracking freezing rain as it happens
  • Very little precipitation in the next week
  • 7 Times Crazy Weather Changed the Course of History
  • Winter storm to cause severe impacts across the South and East
  • Timing of La Niña Exit, El Niño Entrance is Unclear, Raising Questions About Dryness for Spring and Summer

Categories

University of Georgia Extension
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Administration

Log in

UGA Extension © 2012-2026. All Rights Reserved.
The University of Georgia is an Equal Opportunity Institution.
Privacy Policy | Accessibility Policy