NIWA's Hotspot Watch
NIWA's Hotspot Watch
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Facts: Soil Moisture
For
the North Island, soil moisture levels are drier than normal
for this time of year for much of the lower part of the
North Island as well as western and northern areas of the
island. Isolated pockets of severely drier than normal soil
moisture exist in the same aforementioned areas.
For the
South Island, soil moisture levels remain drier than normal
for this time of year for large sections along and east of
the Divide as well as southwest parts of the island.
Severely to extremely drier than normal soils for this time
of the year exist north and south of the Banks Peninsula
(though not present over Banks Peninsula) as well as the far
northwest parts of Otago.
Week-to-Week Comparison
For
the North Island, when compared to this time last week, the
coverage and severity of drier than normal soils have
decreased significantly over nearly the entirety of the
island. This is largely due to the rainfall associated with
ex-Tropical Cyclone Pam. The most dramatic change in soil
moisture content occurred from eastern Bay of Plenty,
Gisborne and Hawke’s Bay. Soils have dried a bit from the
Kapiti Coast to near Wanganui.
For the South Island,
there has not been significant change in soil moisture
content when compared to last week. Severely to extremely
drier than normal soils for this time of year for areas over
parts of eastern Canterbury from roughly Ashburton to Oamaru
then again from north of Christchurch to near Kaikoura.
Isolated severely drier than normal soils also exist over
central and western parts of Southland, west and northwest
of Invercargill and in the Queenstown-Lakes
District.
Commentary
For the North Island, when
considering the current soil moisture anomalies for this
time of year, scattered to isolated hotspots exist in
Northland, western Auckland, western and central Waikato,
Manawatu-Wanganui and Wairarapa, and extreme southern
Hawke’s Bay regions.
For the South Island, hotspot
areas persist in sections of eastern Canterbury as well as
isolated pockets of southern and western Southland and
farther north into interior Otago. Overall, the driest
soils relative to this time of year are present over the
hotspot areas of eastern Canterbury, between Christchurch
and Kaikoura.
For hotspot regions, sustained rainfall
over an extended period of time is needed to return
conditions back to normal.
Background:
Hotspot
Watch a weekly advisory service for New Zealand media. It
provides soil moisture and precipitation measurements around
the country to help assess whether extremely dry conditions
are imminent.
Soil moisture deficit: the amount of
water needed to bring the soil moisture content back to
field capacity, which is the maximum amount of water the
soil can hold.
Soil moisture anomaly: the difference
between the historical normal soil moisture deficit (or
surplus) for a given time of year and actual soil moisture
deficits.
Definitions: “Extremely” and “severely”
dry soils are based on a combination of the current soil
moisture status and the difference from normal soil moisture
(see soil moisture maps at
https://www.niwa.co.nz/climate/nz-drought-monitor/droughtindicatormaps)
Ends