Title of article
Empirical modeling of spatial and temporal variation in warm season nocturnal air temperatures in two North Idaho mountain ranges, USA
Author/Authors
Zachary A. Holden، نويسنده , , Michael A. Crimmins، نويسنده , , Samuel A. Cushman، نويسنده , , Jeremy S. Littell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
9
From page
261
To page
269
Abstract
Accurate, fine spatial resolution predictions of surface air temperatures are critical for understanding many hydrologic and ecological processes. This study examines the spatial and temporal variability in nocturnal air temperatures across a mountainous region of Northern Idaho. Principal components analysis (PCA) was applied to a network of 70 Hobo temperature loggers systematically distributed across 2 mountain ranges. Four interpretable modes of variability were observed in average nighttime temperatures among Hobo sites: (1) regional/synoptic; (2) topoclimatic; (3) land surface feedback; (4) canopy cover and vegetation. PC time series captured temporal variability in nighttime temperatures and showed strong relationships with regional air temperatures, sky conditions and atmospheric pressure. PC2 captured the topographic variation among temperatures. A cold air drainage index was created by predicting PC2 loadings to elevation, slope position and dissection indices. Nightly temperature maps were produced by applying PC time series back to the PC2 loading surface, revealing complex temporal and spatial variation in nighttime temperatures. Further development of both physically and empirically based daily temperature models that account for synoptic atmospheric controls on fine-scale temperature variability in mountain ecosystems are needed to guide future monitoring efforts aimed at assessing the impact of climate change.
Keywords
Topoclimate , PCA , Random Forest , Cold air drainage
Journal title
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
Record number
960149
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