Google Search

For weather information from across the nation, please check out our home site National Weather Outlook. Thanks!

Chicago Current Weather Conditions

Chicago Weather Forecast

Chicago 7 Day Weather Forecast

Chicago Weather Radar

Showing posts with label revealed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label revealed. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Top weather conditions that amplify Lake Erie algal blooms revealed

Of the many weather-related factors that contribute to harmful algal blooms (HABs) in Lake Erie, a new study has identified one as most important: the wind.

Over a 10-year period in Lake Erie, wind speed contributed more consistently to HABs than sunshine or even precipitation, researchers at The Ohio State University and their colleagues found.

The ongoing study is unusual, in that researchers are building the first detailed analyses of how the various environmental factors influence each other -- in the context of satellite studies of Lake Erie.

They gave their early results at the American Geophysical Union meeting on Dec. 17.

To C.K. Shum, Distinguished University Scholar and professor of geodetic science at Ohio State, the finding "underscores the need for environmental agencies to incorporate the threat of extreme weather events caused by climate change into future algae mitigation strategies."

Where other studies have linked weather phenomena to HABs, this study goes a step further to look at how environmental drivers impact each other, and "ranks" them by their relative importance in promoting HABs, said Song Liang, formerly of Ohio State and now an associate professor of environmental and global health at the University of Florida.

"What surprised us the most was how the impact of nonweather factors, such as nitrogen and phosphorus pollution, varied strongly by season, while weather factors remained consistently important throughout the year," he said.

Researchers have long known that high nitrogen and phosphorus levels are the actual causes of HABs, which choke freshwater ecosystems and render the water toxic. But when it comes to the various environmental factors that can amplify the amount of these nutrients in the water, or aid or hamper the spread of algae, the relationships are much more complex.

"One of the objectives of this project is investigating historical patterns of harmful algal blooms and their linkage to water quality and environmental factors," explained project leader Jiyoung Lee, associate professor of environmental health sciences at Ohio State. "By doing this, we can better understand and predict the future of HABs and water safety in the Lake Erie community with the impact of changing climate and environmental factors."

Liang and his group analyzed nine environmental factors, including solar radiation, wind speed, precipitation, nitrogen concentration, water temperature and water quality in Lake Erie from 2002 to 2012. Then the larger research team used data from the sensor onboard the European Space Agency's Envisat satellite MEdium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) to examine how the color of the lake water changed during those years -- an indication of the concentration of the toxic blue-green algae present in HABs.

The researchers examined the environmental drivers by season, and found that wind speed affected the spread of algal blooms consistently throughout spring, summer and fall. Seasons of low winds led to larger blooms. That's because when wind speed is low, lake water is more still, and algae can more easily float to the top and form thick mats that spread along the lake surface.

Sunlight, meanwhile, was important in the spring and summer as a source of energy for the algae. Precipitation was very important in the summer and the winter, when rains and melting snow boosted runoff and delivered nitrogen and phosphorus, which algae use as food sources, to the lake.

As the project continues, the researchers hope to get a better understanding of how the variables relate to each other, and explore the notion of weather and climate as factors in a kind of "early warning system" for HABs.


View the original article here

Friday, April 25, 2014

Corals don’t lie: Centuries of rising ocean levels and temperature data revealed

AIMS researchers plus a team in the College of Wa, CSIRO and also the College of North Park have analysed barrier cores in the eastern Indian Sea to know the way the unique barrier reefs of Wa are influenced by altering sea power and water temps. The study was released today within the worldwide journal Character Communications. The findings give new experience into how La Ni?a, an environment swing within the tropical Off-shore, affects the Leeuwin current and just how our oceans are altering.

“Due to the possible lack of lengthy-term findings of marine climate we used lengthy barrier cores, with annual growth bands much like tree rings, to supply a record of history. We acquired records of past ocean temps by calculating caffeine composition from the barrier skeleton from year upon year. This demonstrated how altering winds and sea power within the eastern Indian Sea are impelled by climate variability within the western tropical Gulf Of Mexico,” stated Dr Jens Zinke (Assistant Professor in the UWA Oceans Institute and AIMS-UWA researcher). The lengthy barrier records permitted the researchers to check out these designs of climate variability to 1795 AD.

La Ni?a occasions within the tropical Off-shore create a increased Leeuwin Current and abnormally tepid to warm water temps and greater ocean levels off southwest Wa.

“A prominent example may be the 2011 warmth wave along WA’s reefs which brought to barrier bleaching and seafood kills,” stated Dr Ming Feng CSIRO Principal Research Researcher.?

The worldwide team discovered that additionally to warming ocean surface temps, ocean-level variability and Leeuwin Current strength have elevated since 1980. The barrier cores also demonstrate that the strong winds and extreme weather of 2011 off Wa are highly improbable poor yesteryear 215 years. The authors conclude this is obvious evidence that climatic change and ocean-level rise is growing the seriousness of these extreme occasions which change up the highly diverse barrier reefs of Wa, such as the Ningaloo Reef World Heritage site.

“Given ongoing global global warming, Chances are that future La Ni?a occasions can lead to more extreme warming and ocean-level occasions with potentially significant effects for that upkeep of Western Australia's unique marine environments,” stated Dr Janice Lough, AIMS Senior Principal Research Researcher.

The scientists used core examples of massive Porites colonies in the Houtman-Abrolhos Islands, probably the most southerly reefs within the Indian Sea that are directly within the road to the Leeuwin Current. While using chemical composition from the annual barrier growth bands they could rebuild ocean surface temperature and Leeuwin Current for 215 years, from 1795 to 2010.

Journal Reference:

J. Zinke, A. Rountrey, M. Feng, S.-P. Xie, D. Dissard, K. Rankenburg, J.M. Lough, M.T. McCulloch. Corals record lengthy-term Leeuwin current variability including Ningaloo Ni?o/Ni?a since 1795. Character Communications, 2014 5 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4607

View the original article here