93L, Florida and tropical
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Angler Trey Linder caught a 1,000-pound shark, which was tagged and released as part of NOAA's research efforts, on July 9, 2025 at Pensacola Beach.
A bald patch of grass in someone’s front yard can be restored by spreading seed or strips of sod. But when seagrass in shallow ocean water gets shredded by a […]
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Hurricane forecasts may be less accurate this year.That’s the warning Democratic Congressional leaders and former NOAA officials raised during a virtual press conference Wednesday. They argued it’s due to staffing and budget cuts at NOAA.
An 1,000 pound tiger shark was reeled in by angler Trey Linder on Pensacola Beach. See video of the shark, which was tagged and released for research.
A weather system moving across Florida wasn’t even a tropical something but it has the potential to develop into a tropical depression as it moves across the Gulf later in the week
Florida's attorney general is asking airports in the state to watch out for signs of weather modification. In a letter, Attorney General James Uthmeier asks the operators of all of Florida's public-use airports to comply with the state's new law that makes cloud seeding and any geoengineering illegal.
WDAM Digital Desk will be breaking down the National Weather Service’s daily updates on the tropical disturbance currently being tracked.
Unlike Monday, which was a deluge for South Florida, today’s tropical-system-related rain is expected to be more concentrated in the center of the state. The Miami office of the National Weather Service predicts South Florida could see around 1 inch of rain on Tuesday and Wednesday, not enough for any severe flooding.
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WPBF Channel 25 on MSNFlorida lawmakers, scientists warn NOAA cuts could have major impacts during hurricane seasonSouth Florida lawmakers and top hurricane scientists are sounding the alarm over proposed federal budget cuts that would shut down key weather research facilities.
The National Hurricane Center is monitoring Invest 93L, an area of low pressure off the east coast of Florida. See spaghetti models. More than a week after deadly floods struck Central Texas, search and rescue teams are continuing to probe debris for those still missing.