Tornado watch ends for Lincoln County, National Weather Service ...
Update as of 8:30 p.m.: Lincoln, Clay, Turner and Yankton counties have been removed from the tornado watch, according to NWS.
Update as of 6:30 p.m.: The area is expecting multiple rounds of precipitation Saturday night through the rest of the week, according to the NWS.
"We have a high probability (60-100%) of rainfall totals of 1+ inches and a moderate probability (30-70%) of rainfall totals exceeding 2+ inches through Tuesday," the NWS stated.
The storms expected tonight are currently over northeastern Nebraska and far southeastern South Dakota, and will move slowly northeast throughout the evening, the NWS states.
"There has been at least one confirmed tornado in NE Nebraska," the NWS stated on X, formerly Twitter. "If outdoors this evening, be prepared to take cover if a warning is issued."
Earlier story: A tornado watch has been issued Saturday for parts of southeastern South Dakota.
The watch, which means the atmosphere has the possibility of producing such threats, is expected to remain in place until 10 p.m., according to the National Weather Service office in Sioux Falls. A warning means the threat is happening.
The NWS Storm Prediction Center includes these counties as part of the watch:
- Clay
- Lincoln
- Turner
- Union
- Yankton
The watch also extends into parts of Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri and Nebraska.
"Departing showers and storms have limited this afternoon’s destabilization, making storms most likely to form in eastern NE and then track northeast and east into areas near and east of the I-29 corridor this evening," the NWS stated in its latest weather briefing online. "Large hail, damaging wind gusts, a few tornadoes, and locally heavy downpours are all threats."
The highest chance for severe weather is anticipated between 8 and 10 p.m. for South Dakota, the NWS states.
Severe storm chances are then possible again between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m. Sunday night into Monday for the area, with heavy rain, hail and damaging winds possible, according to the NWS.
"We'll continue to see shower and storm chances through the middle of next week," the NWS states in its forecast online. "Some storms could be strong to severe so remain weather aware and have a plan should a warning be issued in your area. Heat and humidity increase with heat indices climbing near to above 100 degrees. Breezy winds prevail."
Follow and refresh this page for the latest information.