Weakest Atlantic Hurricane Season in Decades Comes to a Close

(Los Angeles Times/MCT) —

With just one storm that made landfall in the United States, this year’s Atlantic hurricane season officially ended Saturday as the weakest since 1982.

Hurricanes need moist air to form, and the low number of Atlantic hurricanes was due in large part to dry air over the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea and the tropical Atlantic Ocean, according to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.

“This unexpectedly low activity is linked to an unpredictable atmospheric pattern that prevented the growth of storms by producing an exceptionally dry, sinking air and a strong vertical wind shear in much of the main hurricane formation region, which spans the tropical Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea,” said Gerry Bell, lead seasonal hurricane forecaster at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center, in a statement. “Also detrimental to some tropical cyclones this year were several strong outbreaks of dry and stable air that originated over Africa.”

This year’s season ranks as the sixth-least active since 1950, in terms of the collective strength and duration of tropical storms, and it was the third below-normal season since 1995, when the current high-activity era for Atlantic hurricanes began.

Tropical Storm Andrea, which swept along the East Coast in early June, was the only storm to make landfall in the United States this year. In Mexico, however, three storms from the Atlantic basin and five from the eastern North Pacific hit land — five as tropical storms and three as hurricanes.

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