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Climate of 2006 - May
Texas Drought


National Climatic Data Center, 15 June 2006

Statewide Overview / Southern Texas Overview / Southern Texas Paleo Perspective


Top of Page Statewide Overview



Statewide Precipitation Ranks
for Texas , 2005-2006
Period Rank
May 32nd driest
Apr-May 17th driest
Mar-May 27th driest
Feb-May 27th driest
Jan-May 21st driest
Dec-May 12th driest
Nov-May 9th driest
Oct-May 10th driest
Sep-May 6th driest
Aug-May 11th driest
Jul-May 19th driest
Jun-May 11th driest
Graphic showing  precipitation departures, January 1998 - present

Graphic showing  Palmer Z Index, January 1998 - present

Graphic showing  precipitation, May       1895-2006
Graphic showing  Palmer Hydrological Drought Index, January 1900 - May       2006



Top of Page Southern Texas Overview


Precipitation Ranks for
Texas Division 9, 2005-2006
Period Rank
May 43rd driest
Apr-May 27th driest
Mar-May 23rd driest
Feb-May 10th driest
Jan-May 5th driest
Dec-May 4th driest
Nov-May 2nd driest
Oct-May 12th driest
Sep-May 5th driest
Aug-May 3rd driest
Jul-May 10th driest
Jun-May 3rd driest
Graphic showing  precipitation departures, January 1998 - present

Graphic showing  Palmer Z Index, January 1998 - present

Graphic showing  precipitation, May       1895-2006
Graphic showing  Palmer Hydrological Drought Index, January 1900 - May       2006



Top of Page Paleoclimatic Perspective


May 2006, Pre-Instrumental Perspective, Southern Texas

Near-average rainfall occurred in far southern Texas in May, but it wasn't nearly enough to relieve severe drought conditions exacerbated by rainfall far below average during the previous five months. Since November 2005, precipitation in Texas Division 9 has been only 48% of average (based on 1950-2000), and 59% of average since June 2005. Even after the May 2006 rains, most of Division 9 (Southern Texas) was classified as being in "exceptional drought" (D4) on the late May to early June U.S. Drought Monitor.
November-May Texas Division 9 precipitation, 1895-2006
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The graph below (annual values in light blue, 5-year weighted average in dark blue) shows the winter-spring (November-May) precipitation, 1896-2006, for Texas Division 9. The value for 2006 (4.98") is the 2nd lowest since 1896, after 1971 (3.16"). The most striking multi-year anomaly in this record is the 1950s drought (indicated with orange bar), which had seven consecutive years (1950-1956) with below-average winter-spring precipitation.
Paleoclimatic tree-ring reconstruction and observed precipitation for Texas Division 9 for the total period 1652-2006
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The graph to the left also shows a 341-year tree-ring record (1652-1992; annual values in light red; 5-year smoothed values in dark red) that corresponds well to the variability in November-May precipitation. This record is the average of three tree-ring chronologies (Douglas-fir, post oak, and Montezuma bald cypress) from Texas and northern Mexico. The correlation between the annual values of the tree-ring record and November-May precipitation is 0.686, indicating a high degree of shared variance. The tree-ring record captures the multi-year variability of the observed precipitation record particularly well.

The tree-ring record, as a proxy for precipitation, can put the winter precipitation variability of the last century in southern Texas into a much longer perspective. The record shows a number of individual years in the approximately 250 years prior to 1895 that may have had very low winter-spring precipitation similar to the lowest values in the past century. Among multi-year droughts, the 1950s appears unusually persistent and severe even in the context of the entire tree-ring record. Prior to 1950, the ring-width index was below average for seven years in a row only once (1711-1717; red bar), and the total cumulative ring-width anomaly for that period was not as great as for 1950-1956, suggesting it was not quite as severe as the 1950s drought.

Resources:

References:
  • Big Bend (Texas):
    • Cook, E. R., Meko, D. M., Stahle, D. W., and Cleaveland, M. K., 1999. "Drought reconstructions for the continental United States." Journal of Climate 12: 1145-1162.
  • South Texas Composite (Texas):
    • Therrell, M. D., 2000. "The historic and paleoclimatic significance of log buildings in South-central Texas." Historical Archaeology 34: 25-37.
  • Rio Sabinas (Mexico):
    • Therrell, M. D., Stahle, D. W., Cleaveland, M. K., and Villanueva-Diaz, J., 2002. "Warm Season Tree Growth and Precipitation over Mexico." Journal of Geophysical Research 107 (D14), 10.1029/2001JD000851.


Graphic showing NOAA logo NCDC / Clim. Monitoring / Climate-2006 / May / U.S. Regional Drought / Help