Ticker for September 9, 2011

                
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September 9, 2011 September 9, 2011 September 9, 2011 September 9, 2011


La Nina Returns, Continuation of Drought Likely for Oklahoma

La Nina has officially returned to the equatorial pacific waters according to the
National Weather Service?s Climate Prediction Center (CPC). The climate
phenomenon, marked by cooler than normal waters off the west coast of South
America, has been named as one of the primary culprits behind 2011?s extreme
weather, such as the record flooding in the Northern Plains and the disastrous
drought in the Southern Plains. While that La Nina faded throughout spring before
ending in June, the CPC issued a La Nina Watch during August when the possibility
of its return increased. Data now show that La Nina returned last month,
prompting the issuance of a La Nina Advisory by the CPC. Current long-range
forecasts indicate a gradual strengthening of La Nina and its impacts throughout
the fall into the winter should be expected. ?This means drought is likely to
continue in the drought-stricken states of Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico,?
said Mike Halpert, deputy director of the Climate Prediction Center in a
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration press release.

The shifting of air patterns in the equatorial pacific due to La Nina can lead
to the disruption of normal weather patterns across the globe. The impacts most
common in the United States are above normal temperatures and below normal
precipitation across the southern one-third of the country and cooler and
wetter than normal weather in the Pacific Northwest and Ohio Valley. The
impacts due to La Nina are normally strongest from late fall through early
spring in the Southern Plains, although not every La Nina produces the typical
impacts. The return of La Nina is particularly troubling news for Oklahoma
where the drought has caused an estimated $2 billion in agricultural losses
according to state officials. Wheat, cotton and cattle operations have been
particularly hard hit since last fall. The heat wave associated with the
drought has been responsible for at least 21 deaths in Oklahoma according to
state health officials. The drought also extended Oklahoma?s wildfire season
through the spring and summer months.

According to data from the Oklahoma Mesonet, the January through August
statewide average rainfall total was 14.16 inches, nearly 11 inches below
normal and the second driest such period since records began in 1895. For the
Panhandle, west central, southwest and south central sections of the state, it
was easily the driest such period on record. Average rainfall totals in those
areas since January 1 are as much as 16 inches below normal through September
8. The Oklahoma Mesonet site at Hooker in the Oklahoma Panhandle has recorded
2.2 inches of precipitation since January 1. Many of the Mesonet stations in
the western half of the state have received less than 10 inches of rainfall
over that period.




Following the summer of 2011, which saw many of the state?s all-time heat
records smashed, Mother Nature now turns her attention to the state?s rainfall
? or lack thereof ? records. The lowest annual total for any location in
Oklahoma is 6.53 inches, recorded at the Cimarron County town of Regnier in
1956. The driest year in Oklahoma was 1910 with a statewide average of 19.04
inches. It is difficult to say if those records will continue to be threatened
over the year?s final four months, but the return of La Nina certainly
increases those odds. The latest Seasonal Drought Outlook released by the CPC
shows drought persisting in the state through November with possible
improvement, but not elimination, in northern and east central Oklahoma.



Gary McManus
Associate State Climatologist
Oklahoma Climatological Survey
(405) 325-2253
gmcmanus@mesonet.org



September 9 in Mesonet History

Record Value Station Year
Maximum Temperature 100°F TIPT 2016
Minimum Temperature 33°F KENT 2020
Maximum Rainfall 8.09″ SALL 2010

Mesonet records begin in 1994.

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