Image copyright Getty Images Image caption The black loop appeared to have been added to include Alabama in the storm's projected path

US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross had threatened to fire senior staff at the federal weather agency unless they backed President Donald Trump's claim that Hurricane Dorian might hit Alabama, the New York Times reports.

It says this led to last week's statement by the agency, disavowing an earlier position by a regional office that the US state was not at risk.

The commerce department has dismissed the newspaper's report as "false".

Alabama was not hit by the storm.

Dorian had earlier battered the Bahamas, killing at least 45 people.

However, the local authorities have warned that the final death toll could be staggering.

What the row is all about?

In an Oval Office briefing last Wednesday, President Trump updated the US public about the approaching powerful storm, showing a forecast map by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) from 29 August.

The map looked almost identical - but close observers soon spotted a difference.

Image copyright NOAA Image caption The original National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration map did not include a black line around Alabama

The chart had a black loop marked around Alabama that was not on the original version.

White House spokesman Hogan Gidley later confirmed the map had been altered with a black felt-tip pen, known as a sharpie in the US, but did not say who made the edit.

Mr Trump earlier tweeted that several states, including Alabama, "will most likely be hit (much) harder than anticipated".

But the National Weather Service (NWS) in Birmingham, Alabama, responded just a few minutes after Mr Trump's tweet that the US state "will not see any impacts from Dorian".

The NWS is part of the NOAA, which in turn is the branch of the commerce department.

Now the New York Times cites three people familiar with the issue as saying that last Friday Mr Ross had threatened to sack top NOAA employees unless they publicly backed Mr Trump's position.

The newspaper says that threat led to an unusual - unsigned - statement by the NOAA later on that day, saying that Hurricane Dorian "could impact Alabama".

The statement described the position by NWS's Birmingham office as "inconsistent with probabilities from the best forecast products available at the time".

Image copyright NOAA

Responding to the New York Times report, a spokesperson for the commerce department said: "The New York Times story is false".

"Secretary Ross did not threaten to fire any NOAA staff over forecasting and public statements about Hurricane Dorian," the spokesman added.

President Trump has so far not publicly commented over the latest developments.