Showers could bring more flooding woes for parts of rain-battered Britain this Christmas.
Hundreds of homes and businesses have been swamped with floodwaters as winter rain continues to fall across saturated land.
The Environment Agency (EA) said widespread showers meant many places remain on flood alert despite the persistent heavy rain being expected to ease off by the end of Christmas Day.
An EA spokeswoman said: "While the worse of the weather is behind us, the risk of flooding continues with rain falling on already saturated ground.
"As a result, flood warnings and alerts will remain in place for much of the week ahead.
Railway engineers check inflatable dams on the railway line near Exeter"This is because river levels remain high and sensitive to further rain fall."
The rivers Severn, Trent, Avon and Thames are most at risk of flooding, the EA said.
There are more than 160 flood warnings in place across the country, and 266 less serious flood alerts.
The Met Office has issued an amber weather warning - its second highest alert - for South West England.
The Met Office said the wettest place in the UK since the heavy rain began last week was Tyndrum in Perthshire with 6.1in (155mm).
The Holme Pierrepont National Watersports Centre in Nottingham was floodedCardinham, near Bodmin in Cornwall, is the wettest place in England with 5.1in (128.8 mm) of rain and the wettest place in Wales has been Mumbles Head in West Glamorgan with 4.2in (107mm) of rain.
Ballypatrick Forest in Antrim has been the wettest place in Northern Ireland, with 3.5in (89mm) of rain.
Some areas have exceeded their full-month December average since December 19 - such as Plymouth, which has seen 5.1in (128.8mm) of rain compared with a December average of 4.7in (118.8 mm).
Lower-level yellow weather warnings have also been issued for much of southern England and Wales.
Britain is now set for one of its wettest years ever, the Met Office said.
The UK's average rainfall in 2012, excluding December, is 1,202mm - placing it 13th in the list of wettest years since records began in 1910.
Forecasters said December's deluge of rain meant that this year was now likely to finish among the country's highest rainfall totals on record.
The year 2000 remains the UK's wettest year, with an average rainfall of 1,337.3mm.
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