La Nina seemed to treat Louisiana and the rest of the Southeast United States like a punching bag. Its three-year barrage of body blows has come to an end, but left behind a lot of scars from hurricanes and tornadoes among other weather disasters.

Experts caution that attributing any single event to La Nina or its better-known cousin, El Nino, is difficult as . But they can say generally that tornadoes in the Southeast and hurricanes are more frequent during La Nina.

Here are some examples of the of nasty weather during La Nina鈥檚 reign:

TORNADO OUTBREAKS

A historic December 2021 Tennessee, Missouri and Arkansas that killed 93 people and caused $4.2 billion in damage. Tornadoes twisted across 800 miles, including one single tornado that plowed across nearly 166 miles of Kentucky and a bit of Tennessee. At the time warm air during a cold season conditions to spring-like weather that was connected to both La Nina and human-caused climate change.

Last March and April, three different tornado outbreaks hit the South in less than two weeks. The first one was a batch of 83 tornadoes that killed two people and caused $1.3 billion in damage in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida at the end of March.

Then less than a week later, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Alabama, Georgia, Florida and South Carolina in three days, killing three people and causing $1.5 billion in damage. About a week after that, hit Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee and Kentucky, causing $2.8 billion in damage and killing one person.

An outbreak of 41 tornadoes smacked the Southeast in March 2021 killing six people and causing $1.9 billion in damage.

DEADLY HURRICANES

Last year, was one of the costliest weather disasters in U.S. history, smacking Florida with sustained winds of 150 mph, causing $112.9 billion in damage and killing 152 people.

About six weeks later, Hurricane Nicole hit many of the same places as Ian, causing another billion dollars in damage.

one of four hurricanes to hit Louisiana during La Nina, had 150 mph winds and killed 96 people in August 2021.

smacked Louisiana in early October 2020, killing five people and causing $5 billion in damage.

Then three weeks later, killed six people and caused $8 billion in damage in Louisiana.

In September 2020, Hurricane Sally hit Alabama, the Florida panhandle and parts of Georgia causing $8.4 billion in damages.

NATURAL TRENDS AND CLIMATE CHANGE

The natural cooling and warming trends in Pacific Ocean waters from La Ninas and El Ninos ripple through global weather patterns, but studies show human-caused has also increased and intensified weather extremes worldwide.

Both La Nina and climate change 鈥渓oad the dice for more extremes,鈥 said University of Northern Illinois atmospheric scientist Victor Gensini, but he said it鈥檚 difficult to attribute any single event to La Nina. ___ Follow AP鈥檚 climate and environment coverage at ___ Follow Seth Borenstein on Twitter at ___ Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP鈥檚 climate initiative The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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