
Flash flood warnings between January and mid-July have hit record numbers in 2025.
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Bryce Anderson has been DTN's ag meteorologist and fill-in market analyst since 1991. He combines his expertise in weather forecasting with a south-central Nebraska farm background to bring in-depth, focused commentary on the top weather developments affecting agriculture each day.
His comments in the DTN Ag Weather Brief and the DTN Market Impact Weather articles are read by persons involved in all aspects of the agricultural industry and in all major crop and livestock production areas of the U.S. and Canada.
Bryce also delivers forecast commentary on regional and national farm broadcast programs and hosts DTN audio and video productions.
Prior to joining DTN, Bryce was in radio and television farm broadcasting and agricultural meteorology at stations in Iowa, Missouri and Nebraska. He holds a degree in broadcast journalism from the University of Nebraska, and a certificate of broadcast meteorology from Mississippi State University.
Flash flood warnings between January and mid-July have hit record numbers in 2025.
The tendency for air temperature to increase because of heat from dry soils is key to drought enhancing heat waves.
Flash flood warnings between January and mid-July have hit record numbers in 2025.
The tendency for air temperature to increase because of heat from dry soils is key to drought enhancing heat waves.
Recent research points to increased midsummer rain prospects due to corn's humidity contribution.
Soil moisture and duration of extreme temperatures are key to avoiding yield loss.
The prospect of hot upper-atmosphere high pressure formation is the main signal from very hot northern Corn Belt conditions before Memorial Day.
Possible flash drought conditions in Manitoba and Saskatchewan have enhanced the outbreak of deadly wildfires.
Tornado outbreaks in Mississippi, Illinois, Missouri and Texas have been notably high so far this year.
The global average January-April temperature was the second highest on record, second only to 2024.
Major U.S. crop areas are drier now than in 2012, when U.S. corn yields were the lowest so far this century.
Sustained worldwide warming leads to sharp differences in the rates of drying and precipitation.
Heavy Midwest spring precipitation has led to big improvements for row-crop moisture.
Below-average runoff forecast indicates reduced soil moisture in northwestern Corn Belt.