gilles1
Forumer storico
buongiorno!
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ecco gli aggiornamenti sull'influenza delle piogge sul crop
Supply Uncertainty: Weather. The drought will continue to be a major influence on U.S. supply uncertainty during 2012. The 30 to 90 day outlook (through September) for most U.S. cotton growing regions is for warmer-than-normal conditions. However the same outlook shows an equal chance of normal and drier-than-normal precipitation conditions over most regions, and a chance for greater precipitation along the Gulf Coast and lower Atlantic areas. This latter forecast is a significant improvement over previous long-term precipitation forecasts, and it partially jibes with NOAA’s official designation of current ENSO-neutral conditions, i.e., neither La Nina nor El Nino. The July 3 U.S. drought monitor still shows the entire range of drought levels, including patches of extreme and severe drought, stretched from coast to coast. The notably bad spots remain in Georgia, NW Arkansas, SW Missouri, the Texas South Plains, Northern Rolling Plains, and a few spots in Central and South Texas. Unfortunately, NOAA’s Seasonal Drought Outlook shows indications of drought persistence in the same regions of Texas, the North Delta, and Alabama/Georgia. This week’s rains won’t help much: the week ending July 6 saw only light to scattered rainfallover the Texas Gulf Coast and southeastern states. This rainfall pattern, and the extreme dryness in the western portions of Texas, are highlighted in the July 3 edition of Texas Crop, Weather from AgriLife Today.
e...sveglia!!! siamo finiti in seconda pagina
ecco gli aggiornamenti sull'influenza delle piogge sul crop
Supply Uncertainty: Weather. The drought will continue to be a major influence on U.S. supply uncertainty during 2012. The 30 to 90 day outlook (through September) for most U.S. cotton growing regions is for warmer-than-normal conditions. However the same outlook shows an equal chance of normal and drier-than-normal precipitation conditions over most regions, and a chance for greater precipitation along the Gulf Coast and lower Atlantic areas. This latter forecast is a significant improvement over previous long-term precipitation forecasts, and it partially jibes with NOAA’s official designation of current ENSO-neutral conditions, i.e., neither La Nina nor El Nino. The July 3 U.S. drought monitor still shows the entire range of drought levels, including patches of extreme and severe drought, stretched from coast to coast. The notably bad spots remain in Georgia, NW Arkansas, SW Missouri, the Texas South Plains, Northern Rolling Plains, and a few spots in Central and South Texas. Unfortunately, NOAA’s Seasonal Drought Outlook shows indications of drought persistence in the same regions of Texas, the North Delta, and Alabama/Georgia. This week’s rains won’t help much: the week ending July 6 saw only light to scattered rainfallover the Texas Gulf Coast and southeastern states. This rainfall pattern, and the extreme dryness in the western portions of Texas, are highlighted in the July 3 edition of Texas Crop, Weather from AgriLife Today.