A website from UGA Cooperative Extension

Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast

  • Home
  • Colorado State hurricane forecast indicates slightly above average season in store

    Pam Knox

    April 5, 2018

    The first of several tropical storm forecasts for the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season was released today by Colorado State University. It shows that they expect a slightly greater than normal number of storms and probability of making landfall in the US based on the weakening La Niña and ocean temperatures that are above normal in…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, El Nino and La Nina, Tropical weather, Uncategorized
  • California artichoke supply limited by weather

    Pam Knox

    April 5, 2018

    Rain and frost have hurt the supply of artichokes from California this year according to The Packer last week. First a heavy frost hit, and that was followed by rain which caused the artichokes to look frosted and reduced yields just ahead of the Easter season, when artichokes are often promoted. However, unless they get…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops
  • Drought expands over most of the region

    Pam Knox

    April 5, 2018

    Today’s Drought Monitor shows that severe drought has now appeared in southern Florida and has expanded in South Carolina, as well as a significant introduction of moderate drought into that state. As of today, severe drought covers almost 7% of the region, any drought over a quarter of the region, and any dry conditions more…

    Posted in: Drought
  • Colder than normal March 2018 after a very warm February

    Pam Knox

    April 4, 2018

    After a record-setting warm February in the Southeast, it shocked many people to swing back to colder than normal temperatures in March. In many places, the average temperature for March was colder than the average temperature for February this year. Precipitation in most of the state was also below normal, leading to an increase in…

    Posted in: Climate summaries
  • “When nature says ‘Enough!’: the river that appeared overnight in Argentina”

    Pam Knox

    April 3, 2018

    This is one of the more unusual stories I have read about the relationship between agriculture and climate. A set of new rivers has appeared in Argentina, due to a combination of factors that includes land use changes associated with growing soybeans and a rainier climate. The rivers are rapidly eroding farmland, leaving behind deepening…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops
  • Florida climate summary for March 2018 now available

    Pam Knox

    April 3, 2018

    The Florida Climate Center has released their latest climate summary, for March 2018. You can read it at https://climatecenter.fsu.edu/products-services/summaries?id=520.

    Posted in: Climate summaries
  • Adventures in Mapping–Tornadoes

    Pam Knox

    April 2, 2018

    The Adventures in Mapping blog has a story this week about how the season migration in tornado events can be mapped just like the migration of wildebeest or other wandering animal or bird species. Tornadoes undergo a seasonal cycle of occurrence that is ultimately related to the sun’s angle, which changes over the course of…

    Posted in: Climate science, Severe
«Previous Page
1 … 648 649 650 651 652 … 1,187
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

  • Drought continues to expand in spite of Easter rain
  • La Nina ends and neutral conditions are now in place
  • Warmest March on Record for the Contiguous U.S.
  • The West’s unprecedented winter could fuel a summer of disaster
  • March 2026 tied for second-warmest globally, while Arctic sea ice extent reached near-record low

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