The name Katrina has been used for three tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean, three tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific Ocean and one tropical cyclone in the South Pacific. It was used in the Pacific on the old four-year lists. The name was retired in the North Atlantic after 2005, and was replaced by Katia for the 2011 season.
Atlantic
edit- Hurricane Katrina (1981) – late-season Category 1 hurricane that impacted portions of the Greater Antilles and Bahamas
- Tropical Storm Katrina (1999) – Disorganized and weak tropical storm that caused minor damage in Central America and Mexico
- Hurricane Katrina (2005) – A powerful Category 5 major hurricane that devastated the U.S. Gulf Coast, making landfall first near Miami, Florida, as a Category 1 hurricane, near Buras, Louisiana and Long Beach, Mississippi, at Category 3 intensity, causing over US$125 billion in damage and over 1,300 deaths.
Eastern Pacific
edit- Hurricane Katrina (1967) – struck Baja California and caused flooding in the southwest U.S. as a tropical storm
- Tropical Storm Katrina (1971) – brushed Baja California Sur and made landfall in Sonora as a tropical storm
- Hurricane Katrina (1975) – a Category 4 hurricane that remained over the ocean
Australian region
edit- Cyclone Katrina (1998) – severe and erratic tropical cyclone that affected the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, and Northern Australia. Its remnants eventually regenerated into Cyclone Victor–Cindy.