WEEKLY CLIMATE NEWS
ELEVEN: 11-15 April 2016
ITEMS OF INTEREST
- Free admission into the National Parks and Forests-- The National Park Service will waive entrance fees beginning this coming weekend and continuing through next week, 16-24 April 2016, which is National Park Week. This fee waiver will cover entrance and commercial tour fees in many of the national parks and monuments administered by the Park Service, which will celebrate its 100th anniversary on 25 August 2016. [National Park Service Fee Free Days]
- National maps of frost/freeze provide guidance for spring planting -- The Midwestern Regional Climate Center (MRCC) is hosting is a monitoring, assessment, and networking program called the Vegetation Impact Program (VIP) that is studying major impacts upon vegetation driven by weather and climate conditions. VIP has a Frost/Freeze Guidance Project that is intended to improve communication about the state of vegetation and its susceptibility to potentially damaging low air temperatures. A suite of national frost/freeze maps is available that show current season freezes and climatologies of freezes using 32 degrees and 28 degrees Fahrenheit temperature thresholds.
[MRCC Vegetation Impact Program ] (Note: Clicking on a location on any of the maps will expand the map to focus on a regional view with three or four states. EJH)
- Watching the seasons -- phenology observations
and climate change -- For centuries, interested citizens and
scientists have been recording the dates of recurring biological and
other natural events that appear to be related to the seasons. This
tracking of these natural cyclic events, called phenology, if extended
over many years, can be used to document how long-term changes in these
seasonal events change in response to long-term changes in climate. For
more information on recent efforts to establish a nationwide
phenological observation network and how it could be used for studying
climate change, see this week's Supplemental
Information...In Greater Depth.
CURRENT CLIMATE MONITORING
- New "Sea Level Change: Observations from Space" portal is unveiled -- NASA recently unveiled a new Web portal entitled "Sea Level Change: Observations from Space" (at https://sealevel.nasa.gov/) that is designed to provide the public, researchers and decision makers with up-to-date scientific information on the global sea level rise issue. This portal, which was developed at the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, will have an interactive data analysis tool that will allow direct access to NASA datasets on sea level. [NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Features]
CLIMATE
MODELLING
- Exaggerated cloud "brightening" may cause underestimation of global warming by climate models -- Researchers at the US Department of Energy's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Yale University recently reported finding current climate models to be aggressively making clouds "brighter" as the planet warms, which may cause these models to underestimate how much global warming will occur due to increasing levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide. If clouds have more liquid water droplets than ice crystals, the clouds would be more reflective to solar radiation, which would serve as a "cloud phase feedback" that would act as a brake on global warming in climate models. [Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory News]
CLIMATE
AND THE BIOSPHERE
- Satellite imagery helps visualize El Niño's impact on marine plant life -- An oceanographer at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Dr. Stephanie Uz, uses ocean color data obtained from sensors onboard orbiting NASA satellites to determine the impact that strong El Niño events in 1997 and 2015 have upon phytoplankton, a major source of food in the oceans. Watch the one-minute video entitled "How El Niño Impacts Marine Plant Life" where she explains and illustrates the impact of warm ocean water upon the phytoplankton population using the satellite imagery. [NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Feature]
- Annual report of National Phenological Database released -- The National Phenological Network recently released their annual report that shows that the number of local phenological projects and active participants in the network increased in 2015, as more than 1.7 million reports were filed at over 1800 locations during the year. The USA National Phenology Network monitors the influence of climate on the phenology of plants, animals, and landscapes, which helps serve science and society by promoting a broad understanding of plant and animal phenology and its relationship with environmental change. [National Phenological Network]
- Alarm sounded for changing ocean chemistry along West Coast -- At the start of last week, the West Coast Ocean Acidification and Hypoxia Science Panel, a 20-member panel of leading West Coast ocean scientists presented a report that warns the ocean chemistry of the Pacific Ocean along the West Coast of North America is changing rapidly because of global carbon dioxide emissions. The report indicates that the governments of Oregon, California, Washington and British Columbia can take actions now to offset and mitigate the effects of these changes. A series of recommendations is outlined to address the "double whammy" of an increase in ocean acidification and hypoxia, or extremely low oxygen levels.
[NOAA News] or [Oregon State University News]
CLIMATE
AND HUMAN HEALTH
- Changing climate represents a growing threat to human health -- During the last week, the United States Global Change Research Program released a report entitled The Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the United States: A Scientific Assessment that represents a new assessment of a growing public health threat involving changing climate. This report represents a coordinated effort by eight Federal agencies (including the US Environmental Protection Agency, the US Department of Health and Human Services and NOAA) and more than 100 experts to inform various groups including public health officials, urban and disaster response planners and decision makers who are interested in better understanding the risks climate change presents to human health. [GlobalChange.gov News]
- NFL players have double the chance of concussion injuries in cold weather -- In a recently released study, researchers from Canada reported that National Football League (NFL) players had a two-fold greater risk of concussions and a 1.5 times higher risk for ankle injuries when they played in cold weather with temperatures of 50 degrees Fahrenheit or lower than in those games played in temperatures of about 70 degrees Fahrenheit and higher. [Medical Daily]
CLIMATE FORCING
- Two mysteries about wobbling Earth are solved -- Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory recently solved two mysteries involving wobbles in the Earth's rotation, based upon their research into the movement of water around the globe using data obtained from the NASA/German Aerospace Center Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites. Changes in continental water mass in different regions has caused the spin axis to drift and with a speeding of the drift rate, especially since 2000. A deficit of water in a region of Eurasia that includes the Indian subcontinent and the Caspian Sea basin due to depletion of aquifers and drought appears to be the reason for the wobble of the spin axis. This region is situated at a latitude of 45 degrees, a location where the spin axis is most sensitive to changes. In addition, the wobble in the axis in a direction either east or west of its general direction of drift has a periodicity ranging from six to 14 years over the 115-year period of record, possibly explainable by the changes in continental water storage. [NASA Feature]
PALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTION
- North Pole had ice-free summers six to ten million years ago -- An international team of scientists who reconstructed the temperature record of the Late Miocene Epoch from sediment samples retrieved from the Lomonosov Ridge, a large underwater ridge of continental crust in the central Arctic Ocean, claim that this section of the Arctic Ocean would have been ice free during the summer between six and ten million years ago as the sea surface temperatures appear to have ranged between four and nine degrees Celsius. However, the researchers believe that the ocean would have been covered by sea ice of variable extent in from autumn through winter and into spring. [Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research News]
CLIMATE AND SOCIETY
Concept of the Week: Human health and
climate change
Climate scientists and other experts studying the projected
changes in the global climate have been concerned that these changes
can have potentially adverse effects upon human health. The specific
health outcomes are highly uncertain. However, according to the U.S.
Global Change Research Program's (USGCRP) Global
Climate Change Impacts in the United States Report,
several key health-related issues on the national level that could be
affected by climate are: heat issues and heat waves, air quality,
extreme weather events, heat associated diseases, pollen effects, and
vulnerable groups.
One of the more obvious consequences of changes in climate is
the increased incidence of temperature-related illnesses and deaths,
especially those that would occur with heat waves, or episodes of
extreme heat. Projected increases in air temperature and rising
humidity levels across the nation during the 21st century would also be
accompanied by increased frequency and intensity of heat waves, where
air temperature and heat indices would exceed certain threshold levels
for several days. In the United States, recent heat waves have resulted
in numerous deaths, especially in large metropolitan areas. The
elderly, the poor in urban areas and those with underlying health
issues (such as diabetes and hypertension) appear to be the most
susceptible to higher air temperatures and extended heat waves. Some
models indicate that mortality rates would increase more rapidly in
northern cities, where populations are less accustomed to the
less-frequent heat waves. Using a model that includes a high emissions
scenario, the average annual number of heat-related deaths in the
Chicago (IL) metropolitan area could reach 700 by 2050 and 1200 by 2100.
Exposure to air pollution that would include a variety of gas species
and particulate matter could result in health-related problems,
especially those people with respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.
Changes in climate could increase air pollutant exposure in several
ways. Large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns resulting in heat
waves are often stagnant, which reduce dispersion and create
environmental conditions for photochemical reactions that increases
ground-level ozone concentrations. Increased ozone has been shown to
cause reduction in lung function. These heat waves associated with
stagnant weather patterns would also increase fuel combustion for power
generation needed for air conditioning. Changes in climate could also
affect emissions of natural air pollutants and airborne allergens.
Certain health effects would be related to extreme weather
events. In addition to above-described heat waves, increases in
injuries and deaths could occur if extreme weather events such as
tropical cyclones (hurricanes or tropical storms) and floods would
increase in frequency. The disaster wrought by Hurricane Katrina on New
Orleans, LA and the Gulf Coast in 2005 could serve as an example.
Water-borne diseases can be related to water contamination caused by
heavy precipitation events. A Cryptosporidium outbreak in Milwaukee, WI occurred in 1993 in which 54 people died when
the municipal drinking water supply became contaminated by sewage that
was not properly treated because of overtaxed storm sewers. Some
climate models suggest an increased incidence of extreme weather events
across the nation during a warmer 21st century, especially in the
frequency of excessive precipitation events. If improvement in the
sewerage and water treatment facilities are not made, projected in
creases in intense precipitation events could pose an increased health
risk to many people, especially in the Northeast and Midwest. Chicago
could have sewer overflow events going up by 50 to 120 percent in the
future. In addition to the casualties that would be directly related to
the natural disasters, such as drowning, some secondary effects to
these disasters have been suggested, including problems with public
health infrastructures and with post traumatic stress disorder
following the event.
Increases in those infectious diseases borne by insects, ticks
and rodents could be possible with future changes in climate.
Temperature appears to serve as a major constraint on the range of
microbes and vectors, meaning that some diseases could be spread
poleward with higher temperatures. While malaria, yellow fever and
dengue fever have been nearly eradicated across the nation, some other
diseases, such as Lyme disease and encephalitis, transmitted between
humans by blood-feeding insects, ticks and mites, may occur in some
areas as the result of extended spells of warm wet winters, cold
springs. Rising temperatures and carbon dioxide concentrations appear
to increase pollen production and lengthen the pollen season.
Consequently, highly allergenic pollen could pose an increased health
risk to many people.
The report also cautions that particular groups of people
could be especially vulnerable to future climate change, highlighting
the increases in the incidence of diabetes and obesity, which make
individuals more susceptible to disease or air quality or heat.
While a range of negative health impacts would be possible from future
climate change, adaptation would likely help protect the majority of
the nation's population. This adaptation would entail maintenance of
the public health and community infrastructure across the nation.
Adequate water treatment systems would help curb waterborne diseases,
while health care facilities and emergency shelters would help minimize
the impacts of heat stress, air pollution, extreme
weather events, and diseases transmitted by insects, ticks, and
rodents.
Concept of the Week: Questions
(Place your responses on the Chapter Progress Response Form
provided in the Study Guide.)
- The number of deaths that could occur in a Chicago heat
wave by 2050 under the highest danger estimates could reach [(350),
(700), (1200)].
- The incidence of water and food borne diseases [(are),(are
not)] likely to increase.
Historical Events:
- 12 April 1815...Massive eruption of Mount Tambora in
Indonesia blew 400 cubic kilometers (100 cubic miles) of ash skyward.
Eruption disrupted the global weather for several years, particularly
noteworthy: the cold summer of 1816 in North America and Europe. (The
Weather Doctor)
- 12 April 1934...Winds atop Mount Washington, NH (elevation
6288 feet) averaged a world record 186 mph for five minutes, with a
peak gust from the southeast of 231 mph, which is the highest wind
speed ever clocked in the world. (David Ludlum) On 10 April 1996, a
wind gust of 253 mph was measured when the eyewall of Tropical Cyclone
Olivia passed over Australia's Barrow Island and is now considered to
be the highest surface wind speed record. (Accord Weather Guide
Calendar)
- 12 April 1985...Key West, FL set a new record for April
rainfall in a 24-hour period as 6.06 inches of rain were recorded,
eclipsing the previous record of 6.04 inches which fell on 29 April
1941. In addition, the heavy rainfall shattered the old record for this
date set back in 1931 when 1.49 inches of rain fell. (Intellicast)
- 12 April 1996...Duluth, MN recorded 1.7 inches of snow on
this day to raise its seasonal snowfall total to 132.8 inches -- its
snowiest winter on record. The old record was 131.6 inches set back in
1949-50. (Intellicast)
- 13 April 1955...The town of Axis, AL was deluged with 20.33
inches of rain in 24 hours establishing a state record. (The Weather
Channel)
- 13 April 1985...The high temperature of 86 degrees for this
date at Medford, OR was the highest ever so early in the spring season.
(Intellicast)
- 14 April 1933...The state intensity record for snowfall for New
Hampshire was set at Franklin Lake as 35 inches fell in 24 hours.
(Intellicast)
- 14 April 1986...The world's heaviest hailstone, weighing 2.25 pounds,
fell in the Gopalganj District of Bangladesh. This hailstone could have
reached speeds in excess of 90 mph. (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar)
(Wikipedia)
- 15 April 1921...Two-mile high Silver Lake (elevation 10,220 ft) in
Boulder County, Colorado received 75.8 in. of snow in 24 hrs, the largest
24-hr total of record for North America. The storm left a total of 87 in.
in twenty-seven and a half hours. (David Ludlum)
- 15 April 1927...New Orleans, LA was drenched with 14.01 inches of rain,
which established a 24-hour rainfall record for the state. This record was
eclipsed in August 1962, when 22.00 inches fell in a 24-hour span. (The
Weather Channel)
- 16 April 1975...A single storm brought 119 inches of snow to Crater
Lake, OR, establishing a state record. (Intellicast)
- 16 April 2007...An intense nor'easter raging along the New England
Coast caused the barometric pressure reading at Albany, NY to fall to 28.84
inches of mercury (976.68 mb), the lowest barometric pressure reading ever
recorded in April in the Empire State's capital city. (The Weather Doctor)
- 17 April 1948...A ten-minute deluge dumped 34 mm (1.34 inches) of rain
on Tauranga, the wettest 10 minutes ever recorded on New Zealand. (The
Weather Doctor)
- 17 April 1997...The Red River of the North crested at Fargo, ND, with a
record crest of 39.6 ft, which is 22.6 ft above flood stage. This record
flood, produced by several major winter storms, heavy spring rain, rapid
snow melt, and ice jams, was responsible for at least 11 deaths (7 in North
Dakota and 4 in Minnesota) and tremendous property damage along with large
scale evacuations of residents from the Grand Forks metropolitan area.
Dikes along the river gave way. Overall damage and cleanup costs have been
estimated to range from $1 to $2 billion in Grand Forks, where a portion of
the downtown burned as firefighters had a difficult time reaching the
buildings due to the flood. [NCDC]
Editor's Note: "History repeats!" During the second week of
April 2001, the Red River at Grand Forks reached a river stage of 45 ft, or
approximately 17 ft above flood stage and about 7 ft below the top of the
levee. In 1997 this gauge measured a record 54.35 ft. EJH
- 17 April 2004...A 182-day long streak of no measurable rain began in San Diego, CA. The streak ended on 17 October 2004. (National Weather Service files)
Return to DataStreme ECS RealTime Climate Portal
Prepared by Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email hopkins@aos.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2016, The American Meteorological Society.