Newsgroups: lter.ced
Path: LTERnet!news
From: Bruce Hayden <bph@amazon.evsc.virginia.edu>
Subject: CED 4,5 & 6
Message-ID: <1995Jun30.190755.20780@lternet.washington.edu>
Sender: news@lternet.washington.edu
Organization: Long Term Ecological Research
Date: Fri, 30 Jun 1995 19:02:37 GMT

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  Vol.4  No.4, 5 & 6  :::  April/May/June Issue ::: March 1, 1994

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CED METADATA ---- CED is the Climate/Ecosystem Dynamics bulletin board of
the LTER network. In CED, you will find exchanges of ideas, information,
data, bibliographies, literature discussions, and a place to find experts
within the LTER community.  We are interested in both climate controls on
ecosystems and ecosystem controls on climate.  As this is an
inter-disciplin- ary activity, we hope to provide things that you might not
come across in your work at your LTER site.

CED is a product of the LTER climate committee and contributions to CED for
general e-mail release may be sent to either David Greenland of Andrews
LTER [Greenlan@oregon.uoregon.edu] or to Bruce Hayden of the Virginia Coast
Reserve LTER [bph@Virginia.edu].  We expect that the scope of CED will
evolve and reflect the interests of the contributors and users of this
service.  CED will be issued as the preparation work gets done (usually
monthly).  Back-issues of CED may be requested from Ray Bero
[helper@LTERnet.edu] by the file name given in the masthead.Daniel can also
add people to the CED mailing list.

=46eedback on CED from LTER scientists is welcome (non-$$$$ contributions
also welcome.)  For example, please forward citations of climate &
ecosystem publications on your site.  We are keeping a LTER wide
bibliography on Climate/Ecosystem Dynamics that we pass on via E-mail.


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     ***                       CED was on R & R                    ***
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Late spring and early summer was a &%$!!#$*! at the offices of CED.  Two
promised book chapters (delivered on time), hosting the CC meeting at the
VCR, student thesis and dissertation defenses, begging at corporate office
doors, and other normal and expected chores forced CED publication to take
a back seat for a while.  I am caught up  Here we go again.  Readers:  My
first reader, David Greenland (AND), in his first homeland and on leave for
a month. This issue of CED does not benefit from keen eye.  The errors he
would have eyed are mine.


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     ***                      A VERY WAVY SUMMER                   ***
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Weather map watchers are in hog heaven these days with WWW weather
services.  Right now the Ohio State group delivers the mostest. (//httm).
You should add this URL to your NETSCAPE bookmarks.  All the products of
the National Weather Service are now on-your-desk, in color and free over
our Internet.

Watching the 500 mb surface is especially rewarding. It has been a very
wavy summer.  You can find your 500 mb surface at this URL within the Ohio
State server (//httm).  The map of the 500 mb surface is given in
decameters.  540 decameters is 5400 meters or 5.4 kilometers up. When we
look at the 500 mb surface we are looking at the topographic its surface in
units of height above sea level.  The higher the heights the warmer it is
at the surface below and the lower it is the colder it is at the surface.
Thinking globally not locally, we find the 500 mb surface is, generally, at
high altitude in the low latitudes and at low altitudes in the high
latitudes.  Somewhere in the middle latitudes we find that the north-south
slope of the 500 mb surface is real steep.  The isolines of 500 mb height
contours packed close together.  This is where you tend find our fastest
winds, the jet stream.  The jet stream "rides" this steep surface in height
contours.  (Actually the jet is more likely to be at about 300 mb pressure
elevation rather than 500 but the principal is right on!).  North and south
of this steep gradient in the height of the 500 mb surface you will find a
steep gradient in temperatures at the surface with cold air under the low
500 mb heights and warm air under the high 500 mb heights, i.e. there is
one of those fronts you see on the evening news weather map.  Our jet
stream rule of thumb is -- the westerly winds increase as you go up in
proportion to how cold it is in the north and warm it is to the south and
it flows perpendicular to the surface temperature gradient.  Geeks know
this as the thermal wind.

Back to the INTERNET, WWW weather map services.  If you search around you
will find predictions for the 500 mb surface 12, 24, 36, 48, 60 and 72
hours out into the future.  Using these maps you will be able to say it
will be warmer or colder with some confidence!  Willard Scott step aside a
new prognosticator is at the consol!

The isolines of the 500 mb surface don't follow the lines of latitude.
They are often wavy like a meandering river.  When the 500 mb surface  is
wavy in the middle latitudes we usually have an active surface weather map.
=46ronts (cold, warm and stationary) are everywhere.  Fall, winter and
spring 500 mb height contours are often wavy and summer less wavy, i.e.
latitude parallel.  Well, this summer has been a wavy summer with lots of
fronts,  lots of dynamic support for the growth of thunderstorms, and a
crash bang summer results.  KNZ was soggy in May and early June.  CWT and
VCR people suffered a soggy June.  A town near Charlottesville called
Gordonsville got 9 inches in 4 hours this morning (June 27) and on the 28th
Madison, Virginia got 13 inches.  The local joke is -- Hey, have you seen
the Bridges of Madison County.  The smart answer is -- NO. They are all
gone!  If it is wavy over your site don't expect the mercury to crash the
90s!

Anyway consider your Internet Weather Server.  Harvest its URL and put in
your Netscape Bookmark file and all those weather maps will be at your
fingertips.  You will soon become weather geek!

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     ***                IT'S GETTING WETTER UP THERE               ***
     ***                   THE BLAME GAME GOES ON                  ***
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Nature Magazine -- NOAA Scientists have observed in the rarefied air over
Boulder, Colorado "a significant increase in water vapor concentration in
the lower stratosphere."  The trend covers the years 1981 to 1994.  The
NOAA people said it is more evidence of global warming.  I was glad to hear
that.  More evidence was getting scarce.

"Our limited knowledge of water vapor in the upper troposphere and lower
stratosphere is one of the great uncertainties in climate modeling.  It
adds to the concern about the build up of greenhouse gases, climate change
and effects on atmospheric chemistry."

NOAA scientists commented on their data that "they are expected to be
representative of the stratosphere over the highly populated northern
mid-latitudes."  So goes Boulder so goes the highly populated northern
mid-latitudes.  They say this because the atmosphere at this altitude is
well mixed.

This is a Yogi Berra "d=E9j=E0 vu all over again" thing.  In the early 1970s=
,
we worried a lot about a high-flying, big bunch of Boeing SSTs, the
prototype for the Concord and Concordski.  We were concerned for our
stratosphere.  The water vapor in the jet exhaust would wet the
stratosphere and the photochemical models (theoretical metaphysical
constructions) said that this water would destroy the ozone layer.  At the
time it didn't matter that total column Ozone had increased 6% while water
vapor in the air over Washington, DC. (1964-1969) had montonically gone
from about 2 g of water per kg of air to about 3 g of water per kg (see H.
J. Mastenbrook (1971) J. of Atm. Sci. 28:1495-1501).  So what if the data
say the opposite of the models!  So we knew at least one place and time
where the stratosphere got wetter pronto.  Saying it in percentages, like
they do on TV, we get: the air got 50% wetter from the 1964 benchmark to
1969.  50% in 6 years =3D 8% per year.  Now over Boulder during the 1980s,
there was a 1% per year increase in stratospheric wetting.  Maybe the air
is just getting more wet slower than in the good old days.  The interesting
thing from Mastenbrook's 1971 paper is that the montonic wetting from 2 g
of water vapor per kg of air to about 3 g of water vapor per kg was present
from the bottom of the stratosphere (about the 140 mb pressure elevation)
up to 50 mb pressure elevation.  So, we might ask the global warming
question in the usual way.  Does a change at one station indicate a global
climate change, after all it makes Nature magazine these days.  Well,
during the 1960s there was a global cooling if anything, not a warming.
During the 1980s the regression line through the Hansen global temperature
data set has a slope of zero.  The regression line through the Spencer and
Christie satellite record of tropospheric temperatures  has a zero slope as
well.  So even if you like to spatially extrapolate from point data to the
globe, it doesn't do the dance in this case.

Mastenbrook, after his 1971 paper, followed water content of the
stratosphere over Washington DC and was ready to report again on his
findings in 1983.  From 1964 to 1972/1973 the rise in water content
continued as in his 1971 paper.  From 1972/1973 to 1982 water content fell
back to 2 g of water vapor per kg of air!  Hey, it looks like the
it-must-be-due-to-global-warming water vapor in the stratosphere exhibits
very large, decade scale variations: up and down.  The recent report from
Boulder by S. J. Oltmans indicates that from 1983 to the present, the water
vapor content again was on the increase.  Hooking this to global warming at
this early date is a real reach but it sells copy.  Back in 1983 when
greenhouse warming was not the cause of everything, here is how it was
reported: the variation in water vapor in the stratosphere was "similar" to
the long-term trend in  ozone concentration and suggested that "these
changes arise from long-term changes in the intensity of the circulation."
Since Oltmans wrote the 1983 paper with Mastenbrook, he has apparently
changed his mind on the cause of the water vapor variations.

Now, one should not get me wrong.  Water vapor is the Earth's premo
greenhouse gas.  It is important stuff.  CO2 is a piker by comparisons.
Put more water into the stratosphere, top to bottom, and it should retard
the progress of earth-light on its way out to space and perhaps warm (limit
cooling due to outgoing earthlight) the stratosphere more than otherwise.
Well, the Stratosphere, if anything, has cooled a bit in the 1980s.  Global
warming is indeed a gold mine and claim jumping is great fun at
half-the-work but that is how the blame game works.

Hugh Ellsaesser wrote a very nice summary paper titled Strato-spheric Water
Vapor in J.G.R 88(C6)3897-3906.  Hugh indicates that the rise in 1960s
water vapor may have begun as far back as 1954 with a very low value of 1.8
g of water vapor per kg of air.  Values this low were also reported in the
early 1940s by the Royal Air force as it carried frost-point hygrometers
with them into the lower stratosphere.  The early 1970s values were around
3 g of water vapor per kg of air are then really a big negative change just
happened.

Hugh's little paper also reveals the mechanism for getting water vapor into
the stratosphere and getting it out again.  This is the "fountain theory."
The great atmospheric convection over the Indonesian maritime continent
(part of the El Nino action) "injects" water vapor into the tropical
stratosphere.  At -80 C and assuming the injection air is saturated, then
the air should be injected with about 3 g of water vapor per kg of air.
The loss area is in the polar regions where the stratospheric air is
"downwelled" toward the surface.  It is possible that the stratospheric
water vapor rise in the post 1982 period may be associated with the great
El Nino of 1983 and the very great Indonesian convection the accompanied
it. That is the Hayden Theory and the kind of hypothesis for which we have
only an N=3D1 basis.  I think it is one of the first times I have even hinte=
d
at much less blamed anything on the El Nino.


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Water vapor in the stratosphere, never, never at a level you would call
humid, is difficult to measure.  It is usually done by an
instrument-carrying balloon on its decent back to earth.  A surface on
which frost can form is cooled until frost forms just like on he windshield
of your just-avoided-pre-Clinton-100x-tariff Lexus on a clear night.  The
temperature at which this happens is the frost point temperature, a cool
and icy cousin of the dew point temperature.  As the balloon sinks in the
atmosphere adiabatic warming causes the surface where the frost forms to
warm and the frost sublimes.  Ice becomes gas.  Now the plate can be cooled
again until frost forms again and the frost point temperature can be
determined at the new, lower altitude.  This process is repeated at
half-minute intervals and a profile of frost point temperatures is the
product.  Now you can't do that on the way up because it gets colder as you
go up and once the frost forms it is there for the rest of the ride.  The
device that does this measurement is called the frost-point hygrometer.
Knowing the frost point temperature and the pressure altitude, the grams of
water in the air per kilogram of air can be calculated.  That is how the
water content of the stratosphere is measured.  It is a tricky business and
it just is not done in a lot of places around the world.  Our article of
faith is that the air in the stratosphere is well mixed in each hemisphere
and a measurement in one place is likely to be the same in the next palace
at the same altitude.  You need a bit of faith and a lot of trust in your
understanding of the physical laws you love and hold dear.

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Water vapor in the stratosphere, never, never at a level you would call
humid, is difficult to measure.  It is usually done by an
instrument-carrying balloon on its decent back to earth.  A surface on
which frost can form is cooled until frost forms just like on he windshield
of your just-avoided-pre-Clinton-100x-tariff Lexus on a clear night.  The
temperature at which this happens is the frost point temperature, a cool
and icy cousin of the dew point temperature.  As the balloon sinks in the
atmosphere adiabatic warming causes the surface where the frost forms to
warm and the frost sublimes.  Ice becomes gas.  Now the plate can be cooled
again until frost forms again and the frost point temperature can be
determined at the new, lower altitude.  This process is repeated at
half-minute intervals and a profile of frost point temperatures is the
product.  Now you can't do that on the way up because it gets colder as you
go up and once the frost forms it is there for the rest of the ride.  The
device that does this measurement is called the frost-point hygrometer.
Knowing the frost point temperature and the pressure altitude, the grams of
water in the air per kilogram of air can be calculated.  That is how the
water content of the stratosphere is measured.  It is a tricky business and
it just is not done in a lot of places around the world.  Our article of
faith is that the air in the stratosphere is well mixed in each hemisphere
and a measurement in one place is likely to be the same in the next palace
at the same altitude.  You need a bit of faith and a lot of trust in your
understanding of the physical laws you love and hold dear.

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     ***                    CHINOOK SENSITIVE WOMEN                ***
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It is not often you bump into two papers on Chinooks and women's health.
Normally I would just put such articles in storage bins for weather and
health stuff, however, two of our LTER sites (CPR & NWT) are afflicted with
Chinooks (aka snoweaters in Colorado).  Since most clinical studies have
used male subjects up to this point and because I remembered Rosen's 1979
quote on Chinooks by what he called a mountain poet: "like a scented virgin
come to seduce the gods of winter" I know these gender things are tricky
and treading on such slippery slopes is dangerous.  For example, my wife
won't even tell me which is preferred when you just can't use the term
woman (girl, gal, lady, #@*^%$!! , and in the south my favorite mam).  When
the IJB, International Journal of Biometeorology, (Volume 38) takes on the
issue of Chinooks and women, we can be at gender-ease for as long as it
takes to put this little piece together.  The studies reported on here come
our of Calgary where they know a Chinook when they see one. In the study by
Verhoef et al., they focus on the physical, psychological and behaviors.
Now previous literature on the subject impugns Chinooks and Chinook
look-a-likes with inducing tiredness, headache, insomnia, nausea, anxiety,
decreased self-control, reduced reaction speed, lowered efficiency and
apathy.  I get the same responses just be announcing a test in class.  The
studies at hand focus on women in the 20-49 year.  The researchers used the
hey-I-don't-make-this-stuff-up "Moos menstrual distress questionnaire"
(MDQ) on pre-Chinook, Chinook, post Chinook and non-Chinook days.  First,
it should be noted that healthy women show no negative scores on their MDQ,
Chinook or no Chinook!  However, women with emotional problems win large
negative MDQ scores on the day of and the day before a Chinook hits.  The
have insomnia on Chinook days and have fatigue on the day before the
Chinook.  On the bright side, Verhoef reported improvement of skin
disorders with the onset of the Chinook.

The second study,  Rose et al., focused not on women with emotional
problems but those with chronic health problems.  In this group, the
Chinook effects were not so negative.  The effects were mostly on the day
of the Chinook.  These chronically ill women upped their visits to the
doctors office.  Significant (p < .05) 'bursts of energy" and "excitement"
[these terms were not defined in the article but were found in the MDQ
arousal scale derived from the survey] were reported on Chinook days.  Care
was taken to note that the women with the bursts of energy were not the
same as those who recorded excitement!  Relief comes in kind ways.
Migraines were infrequent on Chinook days. Also reported was that there was
no tendency to take naps, stay in bed, stay at home or avoid social
activities on Chinook days.  CPR and NWT PI faculty attention.  Schedule
your exams with care.

To get off the gender hook a bit, I should note that the authors of the
studies were all women interested in the study of the modern woman and were
motivated by a lets-not-study-men-again positiion.  Also from this school
of study is the following.



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     ***              WHO WEARS THE PANTS IN YOUR FAMILY           ***
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X. Li of the Nara Women's University, Japan offers a gender controlled
study in acclimatization in two IJB papers (38:40-43 and 38: 111-115).
Acclimatization means that the physiology of the corpus of an organism
changes from winter to summer and summer to winter.  The two most often
used measures of acclimatization are heart rate and rectal temperature.  In
earlier studies on men the following general rule-of-thumb can be
extracted: the acclimatized person has higher core body temperatures and
faster heart rates in summer and lower core body temperatures and faster
heart rates in winter.  The advantages are 1) heat conservation in winter
and 2) water conservation in summer when body cooling requires sweating.
So Li asks, what role do sartorial choices play in acclimatization?  For a
summer to winter transition (SON)  and a winter to summer  transition (MMJ)
young girls (X.Li choice of gender description.  Here in Virginia they
might be young mams) were outfitted with either trousers or knee-length
skirts.  For skirt-wearers rectal temperatures rose from 37.3 C to 37.6 C
from March to July.  Trouser wearing subjects showed an acclimatization of
only 0.1 C (37.1 C to 37.2 C).  For the passage to winter rectal
temperatures of skirted subjects changed from 37.1 C to 36.5 C while
trousered girls rectal temperatures fell only from 37.1 C to 36.9 C.  So
wearing skirts fosters acclimatization.  You conserve heat better in winter
and water in summer.  Now you can appreciated the fine Scot Mel Gibson in
Braveheart!

Studies of short-term or quick acclimatization also point to the importance
of the extremities in becoming tolerant of cold in winter and heat in
summer.  When you leave your appendages free to swing in the breezes your
body prepares either for the summer or winter to come.


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     ***        DEL RECTAL TEMPERATURE =3D 0.5 C  --  SO WHAT?       ***
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This is indeed a useful question.  First lets assume that the 0.5 C change
in temperature is reflected in a skin temperature change of like amount (a
conservative thing to do).  How much body light is lost for such a change
and how do I have to change my life style to account for the difference.
So lets take two body temperatures 0.5 C apart, say 37 C and 36.5 C.

                                         37.0 C                  36.5 C

Black Body
Radiation produced
cal cm^-2 min^-1                         .7510                    .8007

or in
cal cm^-2 day^-1		                         1081                    1152

for a 1.8 m^2
body surface area                        19458000               20740000

in terms of big
or Diet Calories                          19,458                 20,740

The difference in the measure diet calories is 1290 diet calories.  That is
about 10 average sized potatoes without butter and not made into french
fries.  It is our good luck that we don't have to eat on the order of
20,000 diet calories of food each day (about 200 potatoes) much less
make-up for small changes in body temperature with frequent trips to the
grocery store.  We do indeed loose some 20,000 diet calories worth
radiation from our body each day, assuming we go around nude, but we get
nearly as much back from radiation from our surroundings!  If our
surroundings are cold we wear clothes limit or radiative losses to our
surroundings.  We strip down and bundle up as needed.  Now if we
acclimatize, we make our thermoregulation just that much easier.  We need
to strip down less in summer and bundle up less in winter.  Or we could
fight sartorial urges and focus on food and food burning rates.  Eat less
in summer and more in winter and make up the difference.  Dressing up or
down is easier!

     VIRGINIA COAST RESERVE LONG-TERM ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH PROGRAM
                SEE:  http://atlantic.evsc.virginia.edu
:----------------+--------------------------------+---------------------:
|Bruce P. Hayden |  Dept. Environmental Sciences  |  bphvirginia.edu    |
|(804) 924-0545  |  Clark Hall, Univ. of Virginia |  bph@lternet.edu    |
|(804) 924-7761  |  Charlottesville, VA 22903     |  (804) 982-2137(fax)|
:----------------+--------------------------------+---------------------:



