Missouri’s spring is on track to be the warmest on record.
That’s not a surprise for many in southern Missouri, where temperatures and
lack of rainfall are combining to worsen droughtlike conditions.
“It’s a continuation of dry conditions worsening in southern Missouri and
creeping up into mid-Missouri,” said Pat Guinan, state climatologist with the
University of Missouri Extension Commercial Agriculture Program. “It’s not
encouraging to be talking about emerging drought in a month that’s usually
Missouri’s wettest.”
Temperatures in much of Missouri ran 4-6 degrees above normal and rainfall
south of I-70 is well below normal for the first half of May, according to
Guinan’s data. The Bootheel is now experiencing a moderate to severe drought,
with abnormal dryness radiating into much of southeastern Missouri, according to
the National Drought Mitigation Center’s May 17 report.
Guinan said the map of abnormally dry conditions needs to be expanded to
include more of south-central Missouri, where the month-to-date total in some
locations is less than 0.25 inch.
He is encouraging Missourians to report on-the-ground dryness conditions
through the Drought Impact Reporter (DIR) so everyone gets a more accurate
picture of the extent of drought.
“No instrument or third party will be able to describe a drought situation
as well as someone living in the area and experiencing the situation,” Guinan
said.
More input and participation can bring national reports in line with local
observations, leading to a more accurate overall picture of drought
severity.
Evapotranspiration is also much higher than normal this year.
Evapotranspiration is the sum of water lost to evaporation and plants
transpiring, a process similar to humans sweating.
“Moisture is being sucked out of the ground faster than it would be in a
typical May, so things dry out faster and you slide quicker into a drought,”
Guinan said. “High evapotranspiration, windy and cloudless days with lots of
solar radiation, low humidity, and higher temperatures increase the amount of
moisture loss from the soil profile as well as from vegetation that transpires
that moisture. It’s more typical to see this in the summertime than in the first
half of May.”
Forecasts don’t promise to improve that picture much.
“Across Missouri we’re only seeing precipitation predictions of 1/4 to 1/2
inch in the five-day forecast, which is definitely not enough to help,” Guinan
said.
Missourians are encouraged to go online and use the Drought Impact Reporter
at droughtreporter.unl.edu.
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