Earth ChangesS


Bug

Huge swarm of locusts blight Indian town

locusts
An army of locusts coming from the Pakistan side has laid siege to a western Indian border district.

Rajasthan's Jaisalmer district is witnessing the biggest attack in 26 years, said the Locust Warning Organisation (LWO), headquartered in Jodhpur.

According to the officials, locust hunters are trying to limit the damage.

The last major locust outbreak was reported in Rajasthan in 1993.


Attention

Mount Merapi on Java erupts, spews ash columns 3000 metres into the sky

Mount Merapi
Mount Merapi
Mount Merapi, Indonesia's most active volcano, shot out 72 ash columns this weekend, with authorities declaring a 3km danger zone, and fears of a 'lava lake' forming.

Indonesia's most active volcano, Mount Merapi, has spewed ash columns 3000 metres into the sky, local media report.

Indonesia's Geological Disaster Research and Development Centre said by Saturday, Merapi had emitted 72 ash columns from its crater since it started showing signs of forming ash columns and spewing incandescent lava in late January, state news agency Antara reported.

Agency head Hanik Humaida said based on the ash-column activity, the volcano's lava dome could potentially cause a lava avalanche of 458,000 cubic metres in volume that would move up to 3 kilometres from the crater toward the river Gendol.


Attention

The wettest and wildest planting season American farmers can remember

Water floods a cornfield in Malden, Illinois, U.S., on Wednesday, May 29, 2019
© Daniel Acker/BloombergWater floods a cornfield in Malden, Illinois, U.S., on Wednesday, May 29, 2019. Claims known as prevented plant pay out when farmers are unable to sow crops at all. With unceasing rain keeping farmers out of fields, growers are increasingly weighing how best to get paid and ease the impact from the bad weather and an escalating U.S.-China trade war.
There has never been a spring planting season like this one. Rivers topped their banks. Levees were breached. Fields filled with water and mud. And it kept raining.

It was raining when U.S. farmers, a year into being squeezed out of the world's largest soybean market by the trade war with China, were supposed to start putting down crops. It was raining when President Donald Trump risked starting a feud with Mexico, the biggest buyer of U.S. corn, by threatening to slap tariffs on its exports.

"You hear words like biblical, unprecedented," said Sherman Newlin, a corn and soybean farmer in Illinois. "That's all true."

The storms and rains may soon lift, but the layers of uncertainty just keep adding up.

Farmers who have lost access to Chinese soy buyers don't see relief on the horizon. Other countries may chip away at corn exports. With Brazil reaping a bumper crop while U.S. farmers watched the weather, buyers in Asia were shopping for South American grain.

Comment: It is no wonder that these extreme conditions are wreaking havoc on American farmers' mental health. The record-breaking spring rainfall has devastated crop production in the US Midwest. See also:


Cloud Precipitation

It's June and Colorado's snowpack is 437% of normal: What that means for flood season

Thunder Mountain Lodge
© Jeff KieperThunder Mountain Lodge
The calendar turned to June on Saturday and our statewide snowpack was 437% of normal, with highs peaking at 768% in the San Juan Mountains, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service.

The heavy snowfall this year has been a good thing for skiing (with Arapahoe Basin still open) and the drought conditions - all of Colorado was drought-free as of this week.

But heading into summer, the snowpack is likely to result in some flooding, according to the Colorado Water Conservation Board, which released a report this week on the outlook for snowmelt flood conditions.

Here's what to watch for as we should start to see an uptick in snow runoff.

Cloud Precipitation

Continuous rain wreaks havoc on crops in Misiones, Paraguay

The oranges of the San Francisco neighbourhood of Villa Floria are surrounded by water.
The oranges of the San Francisco neighbourhood of Villa Florida are surrounded by water.
The continuous rains in the Department of Misiones have severely affected agricultural crops. According to data from the Department of Agrarian Extension (DEAG), 450 to 500 millimeters of rainfall were recorded between May 5 and the 10.

The most affected districts have been San Ignacio, Santa Maria, and Santa Rosa, which lost almost all of their vegetables, manioc, and rice harvests.

Fortunately, the rains took place at a time in which there aren't many plantings and affected the cassava the most. The rains also affected vegetable, tomato, and bell pepper crops in some areas.

Due to the constant rain the vegetables suffered attacks from mites. Lettuce and strawberry crops are suffering from delays in growth.

Source: abc.com.py

Cloud Precipitation

Bad weather damages orchards on the Sele plain in Italy

Heavy rain, flooding in Puglia, Emilia-Romagna
Heavy rain, flooding in Puglia, Emilia-Romagna
A report drafted by Confagricoltura Salerno explains that the incessant rain of the past few days and the heavy hailstorms compromised 80% of the peach, plum, nectarine and apricot open-field orchards in the south of the Sele plain towards Eboli.

Giovanni Mellone, an entrepreneur from the Sele plain, reported that "kiwifruits were heavily damaged and blossoming was scarce, so orchards will not be very productive. Some apricot cultivars either did not produce or experienced delayed ripening, and stone fruit ripening was delayed in general. This summer campaign will not be one of the best, as there were will be gaps alternated with moments where the market will be saturated."

Tornado2

Series of waterspouts appear on Gulf Coast: See photos, videos

waterspout
© Justin Gray
Images from Orange Beach and other spots on the Gulf Coast show water spouts popping up Friday morning.

The spouts were seen in Florida and Alabama, according to photos and videos posted online.

The National Weather Service in Mobile said the waterspouts were produced by showers that rolled through the area this morning.


Apple Red

Bad weather damages production of Bigarreau cherries in Italy

cherries
The intense and anomalous wave of bad weather that hit the entire peninsula in May with rain, hail, wind and temperatures below the seasonal average has dealt a severe blow to the cherry industry. The 2019 marketing year began in both the North and the South about 7-10 days late on the normal harvest calendars, with the first early Bigarreau varieties.

The production area of Bari alone accounts for 30% of national volumes. There, production was already expected to fall as a result of adverse weather conditions recorded during flowering and fruit set, and it was further affected by the bad weather of May.

The harvest took place in the first week of the month. At the same time, the intense rains, the high level of morning humidity, together with temperatures below the seasonal average, had a negative impact on the quality of the product. The first fruits presented problems of cracking and not entirely adequate brix grade. Consequently, the product had to be carefully selected in the field, with rather high levels of waste.

Doberman

Man dies following dog attack in Fort Madison, Iowa

canine attack
© Angela Antunes / CC by 2.0
Authorities say a man is dead after a dog attacked him and two others Friday morning.

According to Lee County Sheriff Stacy Weber, the Fort Madison Police Department responded to the attack at a home near the Old Iowa State Prison.

Weber says officers found a large dog attacking a different man who was lying on his back in the front yard.

Officers say the dog was very aggressive and would not release the man which prompted the officers to shoot at the animal to stop the attack.

Arrow Down

Video captures moment massive landslide occurs in Guizhou, China

LANDSLIDE

Hundreds of people have been evacuated as a massive landslide occurred in a mountainous region in Guizhou, China.