This Week's Drought Summary
Over the past
week, beneficial precipitation fell over the higher elevations of Washington
and Oregon, in much of Montana (particularly the mountainous western half), in
the Lower Missouri River and Ohio River valleys, and in New England, leading to
improving conditions in parts of these regions. Meanwhile, the southeast United
States (with the exception of the Florida Peninsula) was mostly dry. Dry
weather also continued across much of the central and southern Great Plains
this week, as well as most of the southwestern United States. With background
dry conditions in many areas that did not receive rain, combined with high
evaporative demand over much of the High Plains and western United States,
widespread worsening of drought conditions occurred from the Great Plains to
the Southwest.
Northeast Precipitation
exceeding 2 inches fell over most of New England this week, following a wet end
to the previous week, thus improving short- and long-term precipitation
deficits there. As a result, drought intensity and coverage lessened over much
of New England. Starkly drier weather occurred in eastern Pennsylvania and West
Virginia. Temperatures in the Mid-Atlantic were generally within 3 degrees of
normal, while temperatures ranging from 3 to 6 degrees warmer than normal
occurred in northern New England.
Southeast Drought-free
conditions continued for another week in the Southeast, although the weather
was much drier this week outside of South Florida. A narrow swath of a half
inch or more of rain fell from central North Carolina to the Mid-Atlantic, and
rainfall amounts exceeding 2 inches fell in South Florida. Temperatures were
generally near normal in the Appalachians and in Alabama, while temperatures in
coastal sections of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida ranged from 3 to 6
degrees warmer than normal for the week.
Midwest Widespread
precipitation also fell from southern Missouri through the Ohio River Valley
this week amid cooler than normal temperatures. Temperatures ranged from 3 to 6
degrees cooler than normal in the Ohio River Valley and in Missouri. In the
Upper Midwest, even cooler conditions prevailed, as anomalies from 6 to 12
degrees below normal were widespread in Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, and the
Michigan Upper Peninsula. The precipitation amounts in the southern part of the
Midwest region ranged from half an inch to locally over 2 inches. Given the
improvements to short-term precipitation deficits, some of the moderate drought
that had been present from St. Louis eastward ceased. However, in parts of
Illinois and Indiana that received less rainfall, conditions worsened, leading
to the expansion of moderate drought in some areas, and the introduction of
severe drought in central Illinois. Parts of southwest Missouri, where
agricultural impacts have been widespread, also saw worsening drought
conditions in locations that saw less rain this week.
South Except
for northwest Tennessee and adjacent northeast Arkansas, dry weather occurred
in the South this week. Near-normal temperatures occurred in most of Oklahoma,
northern Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee, while
temperatures ranging from 3 to 9 degrees warmer than normal took place in
southern Texas. Drought conditions generally worsened in the region, in
particular in northwest Arkansas, Oklahoma, and central and western Texas. In
the southern high plains, the lack of precipitation this week occurred in a
region that has had very high evaporative demand over the last few months,
leading to further loss of soil moisture in areas where winter wheat is
planted.
High Plains Weather in the High Plains region was
generally cooler than normal this week. Temperature anomalies ranged from
normal to 6 degrees below normal in Kansas to 6 to 15 degrees cooler than
normal in North Dakota. Areas of light to moderate precipitation were scattered
about Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, and northeast Wyoming, though
amounts exceeding an inch were uncommon outside of the Black Hills. Degradation
of drought conditions in the region was widespread this week south of
Interstate 80, where dry weather combined with recent warm, dry, and windy
conditions, leading to continued loss of near surface moisture.
West In
the West this week, widespread precipitation fell in some of the mountainous
areas of western Washington and Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. In some locations
in western Washington, western Oregon, and northwest Montana, the recent
precipitation was enough to improve drought conditions, due to lessened
precipitation deficits. To the south, however, widespread expansion of extreme
and exceptional drought occurred in Utah, Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico. To
the west of the Rocky Mountains, temperatures were warmer than normal this
week; readings of 9 degrees or more above normal were found in parts of
California and Arizona. Meanwhile, central and eastern Montana were much colder
than normal, as much of the eastern part of the state experienced temperatures
9 degrees (or more) colder than normal. Similar to much of the Great Plains,
very high evaporative demand has gripped these states over the last several
months and combined with the short- and long-term precipitation deficits to
continue to worsen conditions. The wildfire danger has also continued across
parts of the region as a result of these conditions, and portions of Arapahoe
and Roosevelt National Forests in Colorado have been closed in response.
Alaska,
Hawaii, and Puerto Rico No changes were made to the drought depiction in
Alaska this week. In Puerto Rico, abnormal dryness continued along the
south-central coast, but drought-free conditions remained. In Hawaii, extreme
and severe drought grew in coverage in southeast portions of Maui, where
short-term precipitation deficits continued to mount. Moderate drought grew in
coverage on the Big Island of Hawaii, where recent rainfall was low and
streamflow returned to lower values.
Pacific
Islands The weather across the U.S.-Affiliated Pacific Islands (USAPI)
during this USDM week (10/14/20-10/20/20) was influenced by multiple factors.
The ongoing La Niña kept conditions dry across southern portions of the
Federated States of Micronesia (FSM); a meteorological Inter-Tropical
Convergence Zone (ITCZ) spread rain across Micronesia from the east; a monsoon
trough poked into the western end of the region; and upper-level lows or
troughs created divergence aloft over northern portions which enhanced showers
generated by surface features. These features included surface troughs,
circulations, and trade-wind surges/convergence. South of the equator, a surface
trough or frontal boundary created instability as it moved across American
Samoa. Satellite-based estimates of 7-day precipitation (QPE) showed two
bands of precipitation stretching eastward from Southeast Asia -- one extended
across Micronesia then past the Date Line between 5 and 10 degrees North
latitude, reflecting the monsoon trough and ITCZ, and the other extended
southeast across Indonesia towards the Samoan Islands and reflected the South
Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ). The band across Micronesia consisted of areas
of 2 to 4+ inches of rain enveloped by areas of 1 to 2 inches with drier
patches within the band. The QPE depicted areas of 2+ inches of rain across the
Samoan Islands and extending to the west and south.
The week was
wet in the Republic of Palau. The Palau IAP recorded 6.15 inches of rain
for the week and 17.00 inches for October through the 20th. The Koror COOP
station reported 4.76 inches for the week and 12.20 inches for the month
through October 19th. These values are above the weekly (2 inches) and monthly
(8 inches) minimums needed to meet most water needs. D-Nothing continued at
Palau.
In the Marshall
Islands (RMI), no data is available for Utirik, so an analysis could not be
made there. Jaluit was dry (below the 2-inch minimum) for the week (but just
barely with 1.92 inches of rain) and the other stations were wet with weekly
rainfall totals ranging from 3.63 inches at Wotje to 10.81 inches at
Ailinglaplap. October monthly totals were above or near the monthly minimum (8
inches), so D-Nothing continued at most RMI stations. The exception was Wotje.
With the last three weeks wet and the monthly total so far 10.67 inches, the
status at Wotje was improved from D1-SL to D0-L. The D0-L reflected lingering
long-term impacts to agriculture.
American
Samoa was wet this week, with over 3 inches of rain recorded at Pago Pago
(3.33 inches) and the automated station at Toa Ridge (3.35). With the last
several weeks and months wet, D-Nothing continued at Tutuila.
Virgin Islands The weather conditions across the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) during this USDM week (10/14/20-10/20/20) were influenced by a moist tropical wave with instability enhanced by a Tropical Upper Tropospheric Trough (TUTT). This combination generated rain across the islands, with locally heavy rain in places. A drier air mass with an upper-level ridge moved into the area as the week ended. Radar-based estimates of rainfall for the 7 days ending at 12z on Tuesday showed rain across the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Looking
Ahead A series of storm systems and cold fronts is forecast to affect the
western two-thirds of the continental United States through Monday, October 26,
bringing chances of welcome mountain snow to Colorado, precipitation locally
exceeding a half inch to the northern tier of the continental United States,
and heavier precipitation from central Oklahoma to the Great Lakes. By early next
week, colder than normal temperatures are forecast to be entrenched across the
western two-thirds of the continental United States, while above-normal
temperatures occur in the east. From Tuesday, October 27 through the end of the
month, colder than normal weather is favored from west of the Appalachian
Mountains through most of the West, while warmer than normal weather is favored
in the Southeast. The forecast also favors above-normal precipitation from
southwest Colorado to the Great Lakes and East Coast, while below-normal
precipitation is favored in the northern Great Plains, California, and the
Pacific Northwest.
^ The Drought
is easing in the Northeast. Hopefully it will in the West too. ^
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