Predicting heat waves? Look half a world away

When thunderstorms brew over the tropics, California heat wave soon to follow

University of California – Davis

An orchard of young trees withstands drought in California's Central Valley in 2014. The ability to predict heat waves in the Central Valley could help better prepare and protect crops and people from the impacts. Credit UC Davis
An orchard of young trees withstands drought in California’s Central Valley in 2014. The ability to predict heat waves in the Central Valley could help better prepare and protect crops and people from the impacts. Credit UC Davis

When heavy rain falls over the Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia and the eastern Pacific Ocean, it is a good indicator that temperatures in central California will reach 100°F in four to 16 days, according to a collaborative research team from the University of California, Davis, and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Climate Center in Busan, South Korea.

The results were published in Advances in Atmospheric Sciences on April 12.

FROM PREDICTION TO PROTECTION

Heat waves are common in the Central California Valley, a 50-mile-wide oval of land that runs 450 miles from just north of Los Angeles up to Redding. The valley is home to half of the nation’s tree fruit and nut crops, as well as extensive dairy production, and heat waves can wreak havoc on agricultural production. The dairy industry had a heat wave-induced economic loss of about $1 billion in 2006, for instance. The ability to predict heat waves and understand what causes them could inform protective measures against damage.

“We want to know more about how extreme events are created,” said Richard Grotjahn, corresponding author on the paper and professor in the UC Davis Department of Land, Air and Water Resources. “We know that such patterns in winter are sometimes linked with areas of the tropics where thunderstorms are enhanced. We wondered if there might be similar links during summer for those heat waves.”

The scientists analyzed the heat wave data from June through September from 1979 to 2010. The data were collected by 15 National Climatic Data Centers stations located throughout the Valley. From these data, the researchers identified 24 heat waves. They compared these instances to the phases of a large, traveling atmospheric circulation pattern called the Madden-Julian Oscillation, or MJO.

The MJO manifests as heavy rain that migrates across the tropical Indian and then Pacific Oceans, and researchers have shown that it influences winter weather patterns.

TROPICAL RAINFALL AND CALIFORNIA

“It’s well known that tropical rainfall, such as the MJO, has effects beyond the tropics,” said Yun-Young Lee of the APEC Climate Center in Busan, South Korea, the paper’s first author. “So a question comes to mind: Is hot weather in the Central California Valley partly attributable to tropical rainfall?”

Lee and Grotjahn found that, yes, enhanced rainfall in the tropics preceded each heat wave in specific and relatively predictable patterns. They also found that hot weather in the valley is most common after more intense MJO activity in the eastern Pacific Ocean, and next most common after strong MJO activity in the Indian Ocean.

“The more we know about such associations to large-scale weather patterns and remote links, the better we can assess climate model simulations and therefore better assess simulations of future climate scenarios,” Grotjahn said.

###

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Department of Energy Office of Science, the United States Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and the APEC Climate Center in the Republic of Korea.

From EurekAlert!

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Bill T
April 13, 2019 2:39 am

Joe Bastardi showed this out on Weatherbell long before this paper came out. I see this often- papers that merely repeat known knowledge.

Bastardi is a national treasure.

HiFast
Reply to  Bill T
April 13, 2019 8:04 am

+1

ResourceGuy
Reply to  Bill T
April 15, 2019 11:49 am

+10

Alex
April 13, 2019 3:03 am

Off topic, but very important to note:

New Jersey autism rate soaring compared to other states in CDC study

https://www.foxnews.com/health/new-jersey-autism-rate-cdc-study

“New Jersey has seen an increased rate of autism in preschool-age children over the past four years compared to children in other states, according to a study published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Thursday.
The percentage of four-year-olds in New Jersey with autism spectrum disorder increased by 40 percent between 2010 and 2014, the report said. The study concluded that New Jersey had the highest percentage of children with the developmental disability, which causes significant social, communication and behavioral challenges.”

I have just read the above on Fox News. It is shocking. New Jersey has invested heavily in wind turbines which produce infrasound which in turn causes varying levels of sickness, mental stress and physical disorders.

Zig Zag Wanderer
Reply to  Alex
April 13, 2019 3:36 am

Stop being silly.

Correlation is not causation.

Philo
Reply to  Zig Zag Wanderer
April 13, 2019 8:15 am

But ifrasound from large windmills does have measureable effects on the human body. This is not a statistical correlation. There are a significant number of cases where people developed physical problems when wind turbines were installed near their houses. When the move away the physical problems went away,

Janet L. Chennault
Reply to  Zig Zag Wanderer
April 13, 2019 12:32 pm

Yes! Thank you. This cannot be repeated too often. ( …OK, it _could_ be repeated too often, but it would take some effort.)

Jan

pochas94
Reply to  Alex
April 13, 2019 3:50 am

More likely, autism is caused by addiction to video games.

Gums
Reply to  pochas94
April 13, 2019 7:55 am

And vice versa

Gums sends….

nw sage
Reply to  pochas94
April 15, 2019 5:17 pm

No No NO! I only send my kids to school with autistic children because I know everyone has been vaccinated.

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  Alex
April 13, 2019 4:46 am

The most likely reason is they hired a num Ber of people whose job it is to identify children “on the spectrum”. And what do you expect as a result? More children on the spectrum.

In Waterloo we have about the highest reported rate of hate crimes in Canada. Why? Because there is a very supportive environment in which to file a complaint.

The topic here today is the Madden-Julian Oscillation. Try to focus. Fight the ease of distraction. If someone has a new insight or proposes a refinement of a mechanism we want a supportive environment in which to present and discuss the new ideas.

Samuel C Cogar
Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo
April 13, 2019 6:26 am

Some US states give each County School Board …. $1.00 for each enrolled student …… to help pay for the cost of educating them.

But, but, but, …… for each enrolled student that is diagnosed as “learning disabled” (autistic) the state gives the County $3.00.

That is one reason the “autism rate” has increased from “1 in 10,000” children of 30 years ago ….. to its present rate of “1 in 69 children”.

Bill Powers
Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo
April 13, 2019 6:35 am

Kind of like the number one reason for CAGW is that they hired people and established the IPCC to find an adverse link between man and the climate. Voila!

Wait! you have hate crimes in Canada? I thought that was a condition brought on by life in the U.S. primarily afflicting straight white males that have failed to inoculate by registering to vote as Democrats.

Christopher Simpson
Reply to  Bill Powers
April 13, 2019 8:47 am

Same here but replace Democrats with Liberals or NDP.

Patrick
Reply to  Alex
April 13, 2019 5:48 am

We can only correlate, but this is most certainly linked with the inability to pump one’s own gas.

Rich Davis
Reply to  Patrick
April 13, 2019 12:46 pm

That’s it for sure. Settled science

Reply to  Patrick
April 13, 2019 2:06 pm

How to account for the low rate back when nobody pumped their own gas, then?

icisil
Reply to  Alex
April 13, 2019 5:54 am

While I believe autism’s etiology is environmental/iatrogenic (rather than pathological) I doubt infrasound has anything to do with it. Other areas have far greater exposure and I doubt autism has exploded in those places.

Peta of Newark
Reply to  Alex
April 13, 2019 5:58 am

Good grief Lexy, even I don’t go that far OT.
often
Nice try at a Buck Pass tho

For the record, autism comes out of Vitamin B deficiency, especially in the expectant woman.
Esp= Folate = B6
Brought on by a diet low in meat, eggs and dairy.

Everyone knows about it and exactly why B vitamin deficiency and why 2 of them (B6 & B12) are now, by law in the US and soon in UK, added to white flour

Dairy?
For tiny infants, does that mean breast milk & its feeding by any chance?
(some) grown-ups like to get their B vits from Guinness – it has (should have) a ‘creamy’ top when dispensed & consumed in ‘pints’
haha

Samuel C Cogar
Reply to  Peta of Newark
April 13, 2019 8:15 am

In the 1950’s and 60’s, because the parent(s) or babysitters were too lazy or busy, ….. the TV made for great “babysitters” for young children from 1½ years old to 6 or 7 years old …… simply because of the programming such as Howdy Doody, Mr. Robert’s Neighborhood, Captain Kangaroo, etc., etc., …… that was specifically designed to “interact” with the children watching said programming.

The MC’s would talk to the children ….. and the children would “talk back” to the MC. Would repeat, mimic or sing along with whatever the MC instructed.

Then in the 1970’s, cartoons replaced the MC programming and all interaction between the children ceased …… and the children grew older without ever learning how to engage in conversations with other children or adults.

Learning disabilities and/or autism was on the increase, from “1 in 10,000 children” pre 1970, …. to “1 in 59 children” in 2019. Read more @ https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-04/ru-arr041019.php

I do not believe it possible that a Vitamin B deficiency could run rampant throughout the US population as to be the cause of autism.

Besides, the FDA mandated “public school lunch programs” ….. surely wouldn’t have ignored the need of Vitamin B for the children’s health requirements.

Michael Jankowski
Reply to  Samuel C Cogar
April 13, 2019 10:30 am

“…Then in the 1970’s, cartoons replaced the MC programming and all interaction between the children ceased…”

I was born in 1971, and Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood (“Mr. Robert’s?” WTF?) and Captain Kangaroo were the big programs in my childhood. The former ran through 2001…the latter through 1984. You left out Sesame Street as well. My younger siblings did not have “MC programming” replaced by cartoons. They had Mr. Rogers, Captain Kangaroo (for a time), and Sesame Street as well. They also had the birth of Nickelodeon and shows like Pinwheel. Later there were programs like Barney and Friends that took over morning programming.

Cartoons in the 1970s were in the afternoon (aside from Saturdays) and often of the Bugs Bunny/Looney Tunes variety…which were nothing new (the Bugs Bunny Show first aired in 1960). Nor were Yogi Bear or the Flintstones, which were both from around 1960.

So if you want to blame cartoons, then you have to start around 1960. And if you want to blame the lack of “MC” programming…well, you have to start much, much more recently than the 1970s, if at all.

“…Besides, the FDA mandated “public school lunch programs” ….. surely wouldn’t have ignored the need of Vitamin B for the children’s health requirements…”

Infants and toddlers do not participate in public school lunch programs. Autism can be identified at as early as 18 months, and indicators are usually present by age 2 or 3.

icisil
Reply to  Michael Jankowski
April 13, 2019 10:48 am

Do you guys know the TV character for kids that looks like a cross between the Pillsbury dough boy and a Cabbage Patch kid? I think it was always laughing or smiling. It it had kind of a fat, corpuscular look. I think of that when I see pictures of Michael Mann.

Samuel C Cogar
Reply to  Michael Jankowski
April 13, 2019 3:29 pm

Michael Jankowski, …… GETTA CLUE, ……. Sesame Street, Nickelodeon, Pinwheel, Barney and Friends, Bugs Bunny, Yogi Bear and the Flintstones DID NOT “interact” with the children watching said TV programming.

Michael J – “Infants and toddlers do not participate in public school lunch programs.

Head Start is a program of the United States Department of Health and Human Services that provides comprehensive early childhood education, health, nutrition, and parent involvement services to low-income children and their families. Head Start began as part of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society campaign. Launched in 1965 by its creator and first director Jule Sugarman,

Michael J – “Autism can be identified at as early as 18 months, and indicators are usually present by age 2 or 3.

In 1994, the Early Head Start program was established to serve children from birth to age three, in an effort to capitalize on research evidence that showed that the first three years are critical to children’s long-term development.

Michael J, shall we blame the exponential rise in diagnosed cases of autism on both the Head Start and Early Head Start programs ……. Because of the autism rate, they sure as hell haven’t done much to insure children’s long-term mental development? Oh well, just another couple trillion dollars down a rathole of “promised in tentions”.

Reply to  Michael Jankowski
April 14, 2019 5:46 am

icisil asks:
Do you guys know the TV character for kids that looks like a cross between the Pillsbury dough boy and a Cabbage Patch kid?

The Schmoo?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shmoo

icisil
Reply to  Michael Jankowski
April 14, 2019 4:47 pm

Nope that’s not it. Never seen that. Thanks anyways.

Reply to  Michael Jankowski
April 15, 2019 10:27 am

icisil, maybe Barney, the weepy, sappy “I love you, you love me” dinosaur. Almost sickening to watch/hear:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barney_%26_Friends

Johann Wundersamer
Reply to  Michael Jankowski
April 19, 2019 6:38 pm

Problem is with children bringing chicken meat from Sunday roast (fat and thighs are sold cheaply to Africa where they ruin local chicken farming) because WHO says red meat is carcinogenic.

+ fries for the microwave.

In addition ketchup.

If the canteen staff reacts quickly, it can take away from the kids this non-vegan, disgusting food to throw it in the bin and give the parents a bad testimonial.

modern times.

Editor
Reply to  Peta of Newark
April 13, 2019 5:17 pm

Peta of Newark – What you say about meat eggs and dairy is interesting. If it is correct, then one could expect a higher rate of autism among vegans. Is there?

icisil
Reply to  Steve Keohane
April 13, 2019 11:01 am

That sounds kind of gross. Why not just ply them with probiotics?

Samuel C Cogar
Reply to  icisil
April 13, 2019 3:37 pm

OH MY, ….. you cant just ply them with probiotics, ….. because, …… they might be taking antibiotics, ……. and iffen so, ……. the antibiotics would ATTACK the probiotics and all hell would break loose and who knows what would happen.

Editor
Reply to  Alex
April 14, 2019 5:43 am

Please don’t leave OT comments high up in a reply thread. When I take the time to put together a well polished post and some twit immediately goes off on a tangent, I feel it leaves the post permanently defiled.

Please use the “Submit Story” and “Tips and Notes” links in the top nav bar.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Ric Werme
April 14, 2019 8:04 am

Agreed, Ric. But always remember, cranks will be cranks.

April 13, 2019 3:07 am

Joe Bastardi has been discussing and using these relationships a lot this past year.

Appears to be an excellent expansion of Ben Franklin’s original thinking about weather.

ren
April 13, 2019 3:11 am

Heavy thunderstorms in the south of the US are a harbinger of great floods. The rivers have already reached a high level as a result of melting snow.
The circulation of the tropical Atlantic is consistent with the conditions of La Niña.
http://tropic.ssec.wisc.edu/real-time/mtpw2/product.php?color_type=tpw_nrl_colors&prod=natl&timespan=24hrs&anim=html5
comment image

ren
April 13, 2019 3:38 am

Sorry.
Lows in the south of the US will be very dangerous.
http://oi66.tinypic.com/sljqrs.jpg

icisil
Reply to  ren
April 13, 2019 6:29 am

Is that a forecast for Feb 2020?

ren
Reply to  icisil
April 13, 2019 9:16 am

No, for April 2019.

icisil
Reply to  ren
April 13, 2019 11:09 am

Who’s making that prediction? I find that very hard to believe.

icisil
Reply to  ren
April 13, 2019 11:12 am

I bet that’s anomalies, not actuals.

ren
Reply to  icisil
April 13, 2019 1:42 pm

Here you will see very current weather.
http://en.blitzortung.org/live_lightning_maps.php?map=30

Editor
Reply to  icisil
April 14, 2019 5:48 am

The forecast is for a specific time, like right about now. The numbers appear to be in Celsius, the comment appears to be nearly totally off-topic.

ren
Reply to  icisil
April 14, 2019 6:53 am

Typical average position of the jet stream during El Niño and La Niña
comment image

Tom Abbott
April 13, 2019 5:46 am

Well, at least they didn’t attribute anything in their study to human activity. That’s a positive, considering what we usually get.

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 13, 2019 6:22 am

Tom

The usual tack is to claim that whatever happens, it would not have been “as bad” were it not for the anthropogenic “contribution”.

This is an untestable hypothesis so it is a hand wave, only. A waving hand never makes a nail meet the wood.

This analysis of the MJO hammers home the reality of what used to be called teleconnections. As focus this winter was on stalling and Omega patterns, there is perhaps a popular willingness to examine the role of the sun in creating “stable” (stationary) conditions on a regional scale.

We can observe a global scale, multi-decadal experiment between now and 2060 on the influence of the sun during the next three solar cycles.

Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo
April 13, 2019 6:48 am

My opinion is that the mentality is similar to “acupuncture”. Once you believe in it, nearly any medical issue is treatable and 97% of its practitioners agree….

April 13, 2019 6:27 am

Silly scientists. Political Consensus says it is the Magic Molecule which causes heat waves in the modern era. Maybe they need to be sent to re-education?

Tom Abbott
April 13, 2019 7:19 am

What relationship is there to the jet stream’s Pinapple Express feature and the MJO?

The Pinapple Express has been bringing moisture into the US via Hawaii for months now and is the one of the reasons we have had lots of moisture over that time period. It was blowing directly into California but now it looks like it is shifting a little south.

https://earth.nullschool.net/#current/wind/isobaric/500hPa/orthographic=-84.37,37.02,660/loc=-125.110,19.108

When I was a kid I was very interested in how the weather worked, and still am, of course, but it was really difficult to figure out at first. Then a meteorologist named Gary Shore came to a local tv station and introduced us all to the jet streams and how they moved and changed, with his daily broadcasts, and it finally made sense to me why we have heat waves and why we have wet seasons. If you know what the jet streams are doing then you know what the shortterm weather is going to be like.

Now we just have to figure out *why* the jet streams do what they do. 🙂

John F. Hultquist
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 13, 2019 7:47 am

Now we just have to figure out *why* the jet streams do what they do

Gaia said: Let there be jet streams, and let them be chaotic, to disrupt the plans of the humans.

Keith Rowe
April 13, 2019 7:38 am

Perhaps we should investigate snowfall in Greenland and it’s effect on hurricanes.

Ian M
April 13, 2019 9:46 am

There was a similar weather similarity between an area of Tottori (Japan) and a place in (I believe) New Zealand. (I am vague because it was some 30+ years ago.)

Ian M
April 13, 2019 10:05 am

There was a similar article in The Japan Times about the similarity of weather in the Tottori area (Japan) and a place in New Zealand. (You will have to excuse me because the article was 30+ years ago,)

Dave Fair
April 13, 2019 12:42 pm

The money shot was: ““The more we know about such associations to large-scale weather patterns and remote links, the better we can assess climate model simulations and therefore better assess simulations of future climate scenarios,” Grotjahn said.” In no way will the study help improve the unvalidated/invalidated UN IPCC climate models in predicting the unpredictable future; it looks at short-term relationships via teleconnections. They had to get that crap statement in there to garner grants and get published.

The real importance of the study is to provide a basis for predicting near-term heatwaves (maybe droughts?) in California’s Central Valley. This could be of help the managers of the regional hydroelectric system. As a past modeler of that system, I think any such reliable predictions would be of great benefit.

I don’t think anyone should dismiss the study because of its authors’ pandering to the CAGW mob.

Dave Fair
April 13, 2019 12:46 pm

BTW, we must discourage postings on WUWT of irrelevant health theories. There are other blogs for those interested in such speculation.

April 13, 2019 1:36 pm

Here’s a clue, California. Prepare for drought by storing more water in more reservoirs. You’re welcome.

April 13, 2019 2:03 pm

I have an autistic child. He’s very high-functioning, speaks good German and is about to complete a BA in History, but is in the spectrum.

One of his big self-stimulations was dropping pebbles and twigs into water. One day I came across him playing a video game, and what was he doing? Dropping things off a bridge into the water below.

There was a paper to be written on that behavior, I think.

ilftpm
April 13, 2019 6:52 pm

“eastern Pacific” should be “western Pacific”.

KcTaz
April 13, 2019 11:30 pm

I am confused. I do not see a direct link to man-emitted CO2 via fossil fuels and the weather patterns described here. Surely, something was left out, no? Or, is this study valuable to the “fight” because the models claiming CO2 causes fill-in-the-blank weather can use this so their predictions about AGW/CO2 are not so totally wrong?

April 14, 2019 4:54 pm

The entire southern hemisphere has not warmed in the month of January for the last three decades. That’s conclusive. Either the back- radiation effect is operational, or it is not. The supposed greenhouse effect can’t take a holiday in January over an area as large as half the entire globe.
https://reality348.wordpress.com. Thanks Erl.

Heat waves, by definition, are waiver….the come, they are replaced by cold.