120815_YKMV_A10.pdf



December 8, 2015 • Page 10
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BROOKINGS, S.D. - A
record warm autumn ended
in a winter storm across
South Dakota on the last day
of meteorological fall.
“The snow was a large
transition with eight weather
stations setting new records
for warmest fall seasons
(September through November) according to preliminary data from the S.D. State
Climate Office and National
Weather Service,” said
Dennis Todey, South Dakota
State Climatologist & SDSU
Extension Climate Specialist.
“A warmer than average fall
season was predicted by the
Climate Prediction Center,
and that forecast certainly
held true for South Dakota
this year.”
The eight stations recording their warmest fall season
were Bison, De Smet, Edgemont, Lemmon, Maurine,
Summit, Watertown and Waubay. Another 53 climate stations ranked fall 2015 among
the top 10 warmest. Todey
said the remaining stations
ranked this fall among the
top 20 warmest.
November 2015 temperatures overall were not as
remarkable. Fewer than 10
stations ranked the month
among the top 10 warmest.
“About 15 stations across
the state ranked in the
top 15 warmest on record.
Temperatures were closer
to average at the end of the
month which kept the state
away from establishing more
records,” explained Laura
Edwards, SDSU Extension
Climate Field Specialist.
She explained that the
significant snowstorms
which hit mid-month and
again on the last day of November punctuated the end
to autumn.
Sioux Falls sets snowfall
records
Sioux Falls set two, singleday snowfall records in the
same month. A handful of
weather station locations
in the southeast, including
Sioux Falls airport and Canton, ranked Nov. 2015 among
the top five wettest in more
than 100 years. Some other
stations scattered across
South Dakota also landed
this November among the
top 10 wettest; including Mt.
Rushmore, Philip, Pickstown
and DeSmet.
Some volunteer weather
observers with the CoCoRaHS (Community Collaborative Rain Hail & Snow
Network www.cocorahs.org)
network reported more than
20 inches of snow for the
month; including the November 30 to December 1 storm.
There were also some dry
locations, which have been
depicted in the U.S. Drought
Monitor as Abnormally Dry
(D0) for most of the month,
primarily in the northeast
and west - with Wasta and Ft.
Meade (near Sturgis) ranking
Nov. 2015 among the top 10
driest.
Climate forecast for December 2015
“The outlook for December shows relatively
high probability of warmer
than average conditions,”
Edwards said. “Beginning the
week of Nov. 30, the newly
fallen snow will quickly melt
as warmer temperatures
return.”
The updated outlook,
released Nov. 30, 2015 by the
National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA)
Climate Prediction Center,
shows a 60 to 70 percent
probability of warmer than
average temperatures for December 2015 in northeastern
South Dakota, with slightly
lower probabilities over the
rest of the state.
Northwestern counties are slightly more likely
to be drier than average.
“This area has had some
events come through this
fall with hit-or-miss storms,”
Edwards explained. “To our
south, much of Nebraska
is leaning towards wetter
than average conditions in
December. There remains
some possibility of a more
active storm pattern which
could reach southern or
southeastern South Dakota,
as we saw with the snow
storm a couple of weeks ago
that brought several inches
of snow to that area.”
Dec. 15, 2015 Attend
Climate and Agriculture
Workshop in Mitchell
On December 15, 2015
a one-day workshop will
bring climate and agriculture together. Edwards and
Todey are hosting the event
in Mitchell at the Davison
County 4-H building, at 3200
West Havens.
They will present climate
trends, tools and resources
for using climate information
in row crop production, primarily focusing on corn and
soybeans. Other presenters
from South Dakota State
University, SDSU Extension
and USDA’s Northern Plains
Regional Climate Hub will
show some best management practices for considering climate in agronomy,
insects and plant diseases.
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