Drought
is killing trees across the U.S. Midwest – ‘We’ll see trees
still dying for the next two or three years’
26
January, 2013
By
Judy Keen
27
January 2013
(USA
TODAY) – Thousands of trees died in the historic drought of 2012,
and many more will succumb in the next few years. Communities that
have lost trees are hesitant to replant now.
Hundreds
of thousands of trees died in the historic drought of 2012, and many
more will succumb in the next few years, scientists say.
"This
is just beginning," says Janna Beckerman, a plant pathologist at
Indiana's Purdue University. "I suspect we'll see trees still
dying for the next two or three years."
Indiana's
white cedar and Florida cypress trees began dying in late summer, she
says, and Alberta and Colorado blue spruce are succumbing now.
Trees
affected by a 2010-11 drought still are dying across Louisiana, says
Keith Hawkins, a Louisiana State University AgCenter forester. Some
trees "reached a threshold from which they can't recover —
especially older, larger trees," he says.
About
301 million trees died in rural Texas because of that drought, the
Texas A&M Forest Service says. […]
Ongoing
damage to trees stressed by drought can be caused by insects and
diseases that attack weakened trees, says Laurie Stepanek, a forest
health specialist for the Nebraska Forest Service. She's helping
conduct tree care workshops across the state this month and tells
participants to water trees and use organic mulch to keep them
hydrated.
"Even
if conditions return to normal, the trees will still be suffering,"
she says.... [more]
Drought
seen worsening in U.S. Plains and west Midwest – ‘There’s not a
whole lot of relief seen’
Dry
weather continues to plague the drought-stricken U.S. Plains and
western Midwest with only light showers and snowfall expected this
week, an agricultural meteorologist said on Monday.
Dee
said there would be some light rain in the eastern portions of
Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas late Monday and Tuesday, with heavier
rainfall seen for the eastern and southeastern Midwest late Tuesday
and Wednesday.
"Roughly
east of a line from Kansas City to Chicago will receive 0.50 inch to
1.00 inch or more, but they aren't as affected by the drought at this
time," Dee said.
Commodity
Weather Group (CWG) said light showers fell over the weekend across
the Central Plains and much of the Midwest and northern Delta.
"Scattered amounts of 0.10 to 0.40 inch were noted for drought
areas from Nebraska and northern Kansas into southern Minnesota and
Iowa," said CWG meteorologist Joel Widenor.
"While
very light showers are also possible in parts of Nebraska, South
Dakota and Minnesota tonight and again next week, none of this will
be significant enough to put much of a dent in the drought," he
said.
"The
Plains and the northwest Midwest will still struggle with drought,
there's not a whole lot of relief seen," said John Dee,
meteorologist for Global Weather Monitoring.
Without
rain or heavy snow before spring, millions of acres of wheat could be
ruined while corn and soybean seedings could be threatened in the
western Midwest, meteorologists and other crop experts have said.
A
climatology report issued last Thursday said there were no signs of
improvement for Kansas or neighboring farm states.
Roughly
57.64 percent of the contiguous United States was in at least
"moderate" drought as of January 22, an improvement from
58.87 percent a week earlier, according to last Thursday's Drought
Monitor report by a consortium of federal and state climatology
experts.
But
the worst level of drought, dubbed "exceptional," expanded
slightly to 6.36 percent from 6.31 percent of the country.
Officials
in north-central Oklahoma this month declared a state of emergency
due to record-low reservoir conditions. Public and private interests
throughout the central United States were examining measures to cope
with the drought.
The
government on January 9 declared much of the central and southern
U.S. Wheat Belt a natural disaster area.
The
U.S. Department of Agriculture made growers in large portions of four
major wheat-growing states of Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma and Texas
eligible for low-interest emergency loans.
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