
Almost one -foot snow flew around Deep South last week and Northern Florida. In the French district, I saw snow dunes and even seemingly plain ice hockey on the street. Brevard was just crazy cold rain.
Everything that the climate expert expected this winter was everything. But we have already returned to the standard in the year of Laninya. It is a warm and dry winter that predicts another burning spring.
This year’s Laninya is regarded as “weak”, and is not close to the strength of the fire stage in 1998, which has devastated Florida.
What is Laninya?
Raninya is a cooler pulse than a cooler than the ground water near the Pacific equator. The back side of El Nino is warmer water than usual in the same area. Both patterns move back and forth on irregular bases every two to seven years to change global climate patterns.
Laninya creates a general breeze, usually has a high risk of mountain fire in Florida, and brings more dry and warm winter. Partially, the temperature tends to be 1 to 3 degrees higher than usual and the rainfall is lower than 10 % to 30 %.
With the death of 12 people destroyed by fire in the Los Angeles and the catastrophic aftermath of over 16,200 structures, some firefighters are worried that Florida and the southern United States will come next in Laninya’s cross line. I am.
Currently, there is almost no danger of mountain fire in eastern Florida.
But this is what Raninya means for Florida in the next few months:
Led Fire: Brevard’s westernmost urban fringe faces part of the highest risk of the highest mountain fire based on the Federal risk evaluation map. Harika: Raninya’s sustainability may be a burning spring, a more active hurricane season, and this summer condition that prefers federal forcians. caveat. The Colorado State University’s College of Air Sciences will call a coin toss in the future hurricane season. Others who have been sufficiently cold from early October may see early flowers and may be more vulnerable to frost late in the season.
What does NOAA say?
On January 9, the National Ocean Air Administration reported that the situation in Laninya would continue until April due to the transition to neutral conditions between Laninya and El Nino by May.
In terms of recent weather, it is raining in eastern Florida, but in April and May, the pattern of Laninya may be particularly worried. Florida’s fire season will peak in April. This is the most dry time in the state.
Perhaps, as approaching, a more frequent lightning strike that clashes on the ground tends to cause a strike because it continues to rain enough to attenuate the threats.
In 1998, an unusual weather pattern promoted more than 10,000 fires with 860,000 acres, including 70,000 acres of Brevard County. More than 300 houses were destroyed, and there were 32 space coasts.
That year, the extreme shift from El Nino to Laninia first supplied a thick brush and then closed suddenly as a normal seasonal summer stream in Florida.
The record heat and drought dried the state to the crater that year, and the arson, which is not spoken with lightning, ignited the worst mountain fire in history to torch the sunshine.
Firefighters have decided to avoid another summer, such as 1998.
Florida is one of the “Fire Fire and Fire”, one of the domestic leaders of “Fire Fire and Fire”, aimed at reducing the fuel available for wildfires.
David Zierden, a climate scholar in Florida, said: “That’s what we are doing well.”
Jimwemmer is an environmental reporter in Florida today. Please contact Waymer on 321-261-5903 or jwaymer@floridatoday.com. Or find him on Twitter: @jwayenviro or Facebook: www.facebook.com/jim.waymer
Report radiation:
Call 1-800-342-5869 or contact the local Florida Forest Service Field Office.
For hints on mountain fire prevention, see www.fdacs.gov/FOREST-WILDFIRE/WILDLAND-FIRE/Fire-PREVENTION.