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Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast

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  • Reminder: Southeast Climate Monthly Webinar + 2021 Hurricane Outlook on Tuesday June 8 at 10 am ET

    Pam Knox

    June 7, 2021

    Join us for the Southeast Climate Monthly Webinar! These webinars provide the region’s stakeholders and interested parties with timely information on current and developing climate conditions such as drought, floods, and tropical storms, as well as climatic events like El Niño and La Niña. Speakers may also discuss the impacts of these conditions on topics…

    Posted in: Events, Tropical weather
  • The Strange History of the Invention of the Thermometer

    Pam Knox

    June 7, 2021

    Time magazine had an interesting story on the history of the invention of the thermometer that you might enjoy. It includes information on how the Fahrenheit and Celsius scales were developed and how Galileo invented a precursor of the thermometer called the thermoscope. You can read it here.

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science, History
  • The weather on D-Day

    Pam Knox

    June 5, 2021

    If you are reading the digest version of this blog, you will probably see it on Sunday, June 6. That date is the anniversary of D-Day, the invasion at Normandy Beach. I had the privilege of visiting there in 1980 and camped near the beach as part of a tour of Europe after college. It…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, History
  • What inhibits hurricane formation in June?

    Pam Knox

    June 5, 2021

    Even though the official Atlantic hurricane season started on June 1, and we have already had one named storm (Ana), June is usually not a time for a lot of hurricane development. Most storms that do occur form over the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, although as we saw in May, we get the…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate summaries, Tropical weather
  • Most rain this week in western half of region

    Pam Knox

    June 5, 2021

    The latest 7-day QPF forecast shows that most of the rain this week is expected to fall in the western half of the region, including Alabama, northern Georgia, and the western, mountainous parts of the Carolinas and Virginia. The best chances for rain throughout the region are over the weekend, with drier conditions gradually occurring…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks
  • UGA Weather Network celebrates 30 years of service to agriculture in Georgia

    Pam Knox

    June 4, 2021

    On June 1, 1991, the UGA Weather Station in Griffin, GA, made its first weather report. Since that time 30 years ago, the network has grown from 4 to 86 stations across the state. Each station reports temperature, precipitation, wind, humidity, solar radiation, pressure, and soil moisture and temperature at three depths. This information has…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Extension agent outreach
  • Study: Warming driving rapid oxygen losses in lakes in U.S. and across globe

    Pam Knox

    June 4, 2021

    A recent study published in the journal Nature shows that as temperatures rise around the globe, the amount of oxygen that is dissolved in the water is decreasing. The rate of decrease is much larger in freshwater lakes than in the ocean. This is concerning because as oxygen levels decrease, life in the streams and…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science
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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

  • A little action in the tropics is not expected to affect the Southeast
  • Drought continues to get whittled away in Florida
  • Invest 93 runs out of room to develop but brings a lot of rain west of our region
  • July 2025 so far: Variable temperature conditions and mostly near normal precip except for Chantal
  • Archive of National Climate Assessment documents

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