Big Spring Herald Weekend

Conditions drying due to higher temperatur­es, less rain

Temperatur­es 3 degrees above normal

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Above average temperatur­es are exacerbati­ng drier-than-normal conditions around the state, said the state’s climatolog­ist.

Texas A&M Agrilife Extension Service reports and experts say the hot, dry conditions are taking a toll on soil moisture levels and crops in areas that missed spotty rainfall this spring and early summer.

John Nielsen-gammon, PH.D., director of the Texas Center for Climate Studies at Texas A&M University and Texas state climatolog­ist, College Station, said conditions remain mostly dry across Texas despite recent rains.

Storms over the last few weeks delivered rainfall to moisturede­prived areas of the state, but overall, 2020 is drier and hotter than normal going into July and August, Nielson-gammon said.

“We’ve been on the dry side for whole calendar year,” he said. “The past three months are among the driest 20% of years for West Texas. A few spots here and there in the High Plains were listed as D3, or extreme drought.”

Nielsen-gammon said higherthan-normal temperatur­es were contributi­ng to the problem. The state is averaging 3 degrees above normal. The western half of Texas has been 3-6 degrees above normal, while the eastern half has been within 1 degree of normal. Parts of deep South Texas have been slightly below normal the past month due to good moisture.

“Those temperatur­e difference­s exaggerate the problem in a drier-than-normal summer,” he said. “Moisture can go away quickly during summer, especially with high temperatur­es.”

Nielsen-gammon said drought conditions this spring started in Central Texas and crept south before May rains changed conditions in those two regions. West Texas has emerged as the epicenter of drought conditions, with widespread areas of the High Plains experienci­ng severe drought.

West Texas has received little rain because very few squall lines have developed, he said. Usually they build over the western parts and move east across the state. Storms have developed, but they only delivered very spotty, inconsiste­nt rainfall.

“The seasonal forecast is not promising and favors above-normal temperatur­es and drier-thannormal conditions,” he said.

Reagan Noland, Agrilife Extension agronomist, San Angelo, said dryland crops in his coverage area, which spans much of West Texas to north of Abilene, were suffering from dry conditions though fields varied greatly.

Rains that typically deliver moisture April-june did not materializ­e or were spotty, Noland said. But recent spotty rains may be enough to help dryland fields survive long enough for weather patterns to change.

“It’s highly variable, especially in cotton,” he said. “I can drive across a county and see fields planted at different times that caught timely rains where others didn’t, and the difference is pretty stark. Some of the showers have been short and intense. One area might catch 2 inches of rain and a few miles away might pick up trace amounts.”

Noland said some dryland grain sorghum fields too dry to make grain were being salvaged as silage or baled. Dry conditions negatively impacted establishm­ent of dryland cotton fields, but late plantings may benefit the crop if late-season rains arrive.

July is typically dry and hot, while August-october can bring more consistent and substantia­l rainfall in the immediate area, he said. The majority of the 1.3 million acres of cotton in Noland’s coverage area are dryland.

“A lot of cotton won’t be too far into reproducti­ve growth during the typical hot, dry part of summer,” he said. “The hope is for those late-season rains. It’ll be tough without the spring rains we usually get, but there is hope.”

Agrilife Extension district reporters compiled the following summaries:

CENTRAL

The district needed moisture. Temperatur­es were in the 90s. Hay producers were spraying for grasshoppe­rs and stem maggots. Producers were practicing brush control on mesquite and prickly pear. Livestock were in good condition with good standing forage in pastures. Crops were in good to excellent condition, but some later-planted sorghum had not produced heads. Some hay was baled. Small-grains producers worked their ground in preparatio­n for August and September planting dates. Trees were starting to suffer from dry conditions. Nearly all counties reported short soil moisture levels, and fair crop, pasture and rangeland conditions.

SOUTH PLAINS

Farmers received scattered showers across the district. Rain totals ranged from 0.5-1.1 inches. Cotton was squaring, and early planted corn was silking. Irrigated cotton around the district produced good stands, but most dryland fields were in poor condition. Pumpkins were emerging and showing good stands across the district. Peanuts continued to bloom with pegging and pod set beginning soon. Pastures were dry and needed rain to maintain growth for cattle. Cattle were in good condition.

FAR WEST

Temperatur­es were in the 100s with lows in the high 60s. Isolated rainfall averaged between 0.75-2 inches. Burn bans were

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