This just popped into my inbox and thought it worthwhile to share right now!
“Call
it a flash drought,” said Pat Guinan, University of Missouri climatologist. The
fast developing drought slows growing crops.
No
rain and high temperatures cover most of Missouri and nearby regions.
Abnormally dry weather covers much of the mid-western Corn Belt.
Soil
moisture reserves are drawn down by high evapotranspiration rates. That's a
combination of solar radiation, temperatures, relative humidity and wind to
evaporate water from soil and plants.
“Those
combined with many cloudless days in May to hasten loss of soil moisture,”
Guinan said.
May,
usually the wettest month of the year is
on track to be abnormally dry. “According to weather records, the Missouri
Bootheel has one of the driest April-May periods in 118 years,” Guinan said.
Those
unusually dry conditions affected only the Bootheel in early spring, but cover
the entire state as Memorial Day weekend approaches.
“It's
going to seem more like the Fourth of July,” said Guinan. Temperatures will climb well into the 90s, with low
humidity and drying winds, especially in the southern half of Missouri.
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