- In addition to tornadoes, the storms will also be capable of producing hurricane-force winds and baseball-sized hail.
- In all, over 40 million Americans are in the path of the fierce storms Wednesday.
- Communities across the South were urging residents to know where their closest tornado shelters are.
Several tornadoes were reported across portions of the Deep South Wednesday as forecasters sent dozens of warnings heading into night across some regions.
Wednesday afternoon, a tornado reportedly damaged homes in Wayne County, Mississippi, the National Weather Service said.
At least nine tornadoes were reported across the South on Wednesday, the weather service’s Storm Prediction Center said: Six in Alabama, two in Mississippi and one in Louisiana. No injuries were reported.
The weather service also issued more than 50 tornado warnings in Alabama, Arkansas, Texas, Mississippi and Oklahoma. Tornado watches included parts of seven states.
A tornado watch explains that tornado weather conditions are on the way in the next few hours, while a tornado warning is issued when a storm has been detected by the weather service.
More than 70,000 homes and businesses reported power outages across Texas through Alabama, according to poweroutage.us.
Earlier on Wednesday, the Storm Prediction Center said that “a significant tornado outbreak, with long-track, intense tornadoes is expected to begin this afternoon across parts of Louisiana and Arkansas, and then spread eastward and peak this evening into tonight across Mississippi and Alabama.”
In addition to tornadoes, the storms will also be capable of producing hurricane-force winds and baseball-sized hail.
Storms are roaring across the South:People are sharing stunning images, videos.
A rare “particularly dangerous situation” (PDS) tornado watch had been issued by the center Wednesday afternoon due to the high chance of tornadoes in portions of Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas and Alabama. This includes the cities of Jackson, Mississippi, and Birmingham, Alabama.
PDS watches are issued when there’s a heightened risk of strong or violent, long-track tornadoes, according to meteorologist Ray Hawthorne.
Tornado watches were also in effect Wednesday afternoon in portions of Texas and Tennessee.
In all, over 40 million Americans were in the path of the fierce storms Wednesday, the center said. The area in the bullseye for possible tornadoes also includes Memphis, Tennessee, and Little Rock, Arkansas.
Also, earlier Wednesday, the center had also issued a Level 5, “high risk” warning for severe storms for portions of Mississippi and Alabama. That’s the highest level of risk for the severe storms that produce tornadoes.
This is the first time since 2012 that a high-risk warning has been issued in March, AccuWeather said.
The threat will continue overnight in Alabama, which is an especially deadly time for tornadoes in the South, experts said. “The most important thing is this is coming at nighttime. This is what scares me the most, so have multiple ways to get your weather alerts,” said Nick Lolley of the Tuscaloosa County (Alabama) Emergency Management Agency.
There will be a continued threat of widespread severe storms across the Southeast into Thursday, Weather.com said.
School systems in Alabama and Mississippi canceled classes, planned online sessions or announced early dismissals because of the threat.

In preparation for the outbreak, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey issued a state of emergency on Tuesday afternoon ahead of the severe weather.
“This severe weather event, coupled with the COVID-19 public health emergency, poses extraordinary conditions of disaster and of extreme peril to the safety of persons and property within the state,” Ivey said in a statement.
More:The 2021 tornado season may be more destructive because of La Niña. Here’s the forecast.
In Mississippi, all coronavirus vaccination sites and testing locations were closed statewide in advance of the severe weather.
Communities across the South were also urging residents to know where their closest tornado shelters are.
Further to the west, on the cold side of the storm, accumulating snow and rapidly strengthening winds are expected Wednesday in the Oklahoma and Texas Panhandles, where blizzard warnings are in effect, the National Weather Service said.
Contributing: The Associated Press; The Mississippi Clarion-Ledger; The Montgomery (Alabama) Advertiser