The improvements came on the heels of rainfall that wasn’t too intense, said Illinois State Climatologist Trent Ford. The ground cannot absorb all of the water from heavy rains, meaning a lot of that water runs off, he added.
“A lot of the places got rain that was over a number of hours,” he said. “Better soaking rains that were able to infiltrate the soil and improve our soil moisture conditions.”
Ford cautioned that most of the Midwest, including Missouri and Illinois, is still in drought ranging from severe to extreme.
“But as far as soil conditions are concerned, streamflow conditions are concerned, crop conditions are concerned, things have improved quite a bit since the beginning or middle part of July,” he said.
The corn and soybean crops in Missouri and Illinois are also in better condition because of the recent rain, meaning it didn’t come too late in the growing season to make a difference, Ford said. But the rain doesn’t completely negate the previous weeks of drought, he added.
Consistent precipitation remains important for the rest of the growing season and into the fall and winter, Pugh said.
“The precipitation in those months are very important because that’s the time of year you recharge soil moisture, especially across areas like Missouri, closer to the Ohio River where the soils don’t freeze up over the winter,” he said.
While Missouri and Illinois are faring better because of the recent rain, states in the Upper Mississippi River basin weren’t as lucky.
The bands of rain largely did not fall in states farther north, including Minnesota and Wisconsin, which could still affect the Mississippi River, Ford said.
“The rain we’ve gotten over the last couple of weeks in Missouri and Illinois have definitely helped keep us out of low flow conditions along the lower Mississippi,” he said. “We’re still very dry in the upper parts of the basin north of the Quad Cities. That could still affect flow.”
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