As record temperatures and drought leave corn fields parched in the Midwest, some farmers fear a new Dust Bowl is lurking, the New York Times reports.
The Times notes that that acreage of corn
planted this year was the highest in 75 years, and warm spring
temperatures had allowed earlier planting and had risen farmers' hopes
of high returns.
But Illinois farmer Don Duvall told the Times, “It all quickly went from ideal to tragic.”
The ongoing heat and lack of rainfall have left corn crops in some
midwestern states far smaller than usual for this time of year, if not
clinging to life. And with the pollination time for the crop soon
approaching, the viability of much of the corn to survive is chancy, as
stressed crops may not pollinate.
The Times ends with an eerie image of a farmer picking up his soil which turns to "a dusty powder."
The Dust Bowl that struck the Plains in the 1930s as a result of
heat, drought and ecologically devastating agricultural practices left
highly eroded lands and hundreds of thousands of people displaced. With
the ongoing extreme temperatures as well as a lack of widespread
agroecological approaches, a new dust bowl may indeed be upon us.
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