Many areas of the drought-stricken United States continued to
see improvement over the last week as steady rains started recharging
parched soils, but for key agricultural areas of the U.S. Heartland,
there was little relief, according to a report issued Thursday.
"We've seen some improvement ... but the impact of the drought and
the dryness is far from over," said Brian Fuchs, a climatologist at the
National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln.Roughly 61.79 percent of the contiguous United States was suffering from at least "moderate" drought as of October 23, down from 62.39 percent a week earlier, according to Thursday's Drought Monitor, a weekly compilation of data gathered by federal and academic scientists.
The portion of the United States under "exceptional" drought - the most dire classification - held steady at 5.84 percent and was mostly in western Kansas and Nebraska.
In the High Plains, which include Kansas, Nebraska and the Dakotas, severe or worse drought levels covered 84.90 percent of the region, improved from 87.42 percent the prior week. An estimated 27.44 percent of the region was still in the worst level of drought, unchanged from a week earlier.
Nebraska is the worst hit state in the country, with fully 77.58 percent of the state classified in exceptional drought, unchanged from a week earlier. Winter wheat farmers who have planted or are wrapping up planting their new crop will need significant rainfall and/or snow to provide enough moisture to grow a healthy crop.
In Kansas, the largest hard red winter wheat producing state, "extreme" drought, the second-worst level, held steady at 77.80 percent of the state, while the worst level held steady at 39.68 percent of the state.
Rains help shrink drought but High Plains still parched
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