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State of the Climate
Drought
February 2003

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

National Climatic Data Center


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Drought Report
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Drought Report


U.S. Drought Highlights:

Map showing Palmer Z Index
Palmer Z Index

Please Note: The data presented in this drought report are preliminary. Ranks, anomalies, and percent areas may change as more complete data are received and processed.


National Overview

On the national scale,

Although some areas of the country were dry this month, much of the U.S. was wet. Integrated across the nation, February 2003 precipitation averaged well above normal, ranking as the 21st driest February in the 1895-2003 record. But the near-record dry January pulls the January - February 2003 rank down to 18th driest.


Regional Overview

Map showing Current Month Palmer Hydrological Drought Index
Palmer Hydrological Drought Index

The long-term dryness is also evident in the pattern of snowfall anomalies. Season-to-date (July 1, 2002 - February 28, 2003) snowfall has totaled below the long-term average across much of the Far West, Great Plains, Great Lakes, and northern New England regions.


Western U.S. Drought

February marked a return to drier-than-normal conditions for the Pacific Northwest after two above-normal months. The West region experienced a second consecutive drier-than-normal month. With the exception of a wet December and near-normal November, every month since January 2002 averaged drier-than-normal for the West region. February was unusually wet for the Southwest region and parts of the central and northern Rockies.

Northwest Region precipitation departures
Northwest Region precipitation departures
West Region precipitation departures
West Region precipitation departures

However, long-term deficits remained for much of the West, with several states ranking in the top ten driest category for March 2002-February 2003. Moderate to extreme drought still covered about two-thirds of the western U.S. (Rocky Mountains to west coast) at the end of February. These long-term drought conditions were reflected in below-average snow cover as monitored by snow course measurements, mountain SNOTEL station reports, and satellite observations, as well as by low reservoirs. The winter mountain snowpack is the source of spring meltwater which fills western reservoirs and is used for irrigation during the spring and summer growing seasons. As noted by the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, the below-average snowpack is expected to result in below-average streamflow during the spring and summer.

Northwest Region precipitation departures
Northwest Region precipitation departures
statewide precipitation ranks, March 2002-February 2003
statewide precipitation ranks,
March 2002-February 2003

Central U.S. Drought

Although parts of the North Central U.S. received precipitation during February, much of the area from the Great Lakes to the northern Plains had a drier than average month. This month marked the fourth consecutive dry month for the East North Central region, which experienced the driest November-February on record. Several North Central states had the driest November-February or driest winter (December-February) on record.

East North Central Region precipitation, November-February, 1895-2003
East North Central Region precipitation,
November-February, 1895-2003
statewide precipitation ranks, November 2002-February 2003
Statewide precipitation ranks,
November 2002-February 2003

The dryness has significantly depleted soil moisture from the central Plains to the Great Lakes. This is evident in modeled soil moisture departures as computed by the NOAA Climate Prediction Center and the Midwest Regional Climate Center at both the top soil layers and deeper layers.

February precipitation was near-normal when averaged across the West North Central region. However, the last four months gave the region a rank of fifth driest November-February and the long-term deficits rank March-February as the tenth driest such 12-month period.

Media reports (CNN.com) have illustrated the impact of the drought:


Eastern U.S. Drought

This month saw a return to wet conditions across much of the eastern U.S., with only a few pockets of drought remaining. February averaged near normal across Maine, but dryness in both the short- and long-term gave the state the eighth driest January-February, fifth driest August-February, and 25th driest March-February in the 109-year record. Long-term moisture deficits remained over the Carolinas and Georgia at the 24-month timescale.

Maine Statewide Precipitation, August-February, 1895-2003
Maine Statewide Precipitation,
August-February, 1895-2003
24-month Standardized Precipitation Index
24-month Standardized Precipitation Index

Questions?

For questions on technical or scientific content of this report, please contact:

Richard Heim:
Richard.Heim@noaa.gov

For general climate monitoring questions, please contact:

CMB.Contact@noaa.gov

For climate data orders, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services and Monitoring Division:

NCDC.Orders@noaa.gov

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