The University of Tulsa
Mountain Cedar Pollen Forecast
Monday and Tuesday
Metropolitan Area |
Exposure Risk |
Oklahoma City |
Low |
Tulsa |
Low |
St. Louis MO |
Low |
Date Issued: 31 December 2007
Mountain Cedar Location(s): Arbuckle Mountains, OK
Regional Weather: Monday and Tuesday, Dec 31 and Jan
1 TX/OK: The weather today and tomorrow will be influenced by cold air sagging into the southern Great Plains
bringing colder temperatures and windy northern winds. Temperatures in central Oklahoma will be in the upper 40s
today with mid to lower 50s southward towards Texas. Skies will be partly cloudy to the north with sunnier skies
southward. Winds will be strongly from the northwest with sustained winds of 15 to 30 mph and gusts above that
level. Overnight, temperatures will be in the mid to lower 20s as skies clear. Winds will remain strong, 10 to
15 mph, from the northwest. Warmer temperatures and sunny skies will rule throughout Texas with the highs in the
upper 50s to lower 60s over the Edwards Plateau, and into the upper 60s and 70s along the southern and eastern
Edwards Plateau communities of Austin and San Antonio. Winds will be strong building during the afternoon from
the northwest over the Plateau and from the west in the edge communities. Skies will stay mostly clear tonight
with temperatures hovering around 20 across the Edwards Plateau rising to just above freezing at lower elevations
along the edge of the Plateau. Winds will continue to me moderate, 5 to 15 mph, from the north as cold air moves
over the region.
On Tuesday, sunny conditions will return to the region but with colder temperatures. In Oklahoma highs will only
reach into the mid 30s with low 40s along the southern border with Texas Winds will increase during the day to
10/20 mph from the northwest. In Texas, high temperatures fall from today's high by 5-10 degrees into the upper
40s to mid 50s across the region. Winds will increase during the day to 10 to 20 mph and will remain from the North.
Tuesday night will continue to be very cold as low temperatures hover near the teens over the Plateau and into
the mid to low 20s around the edge of the Edwards Plateau. Winds will continue from the north at 5 to 10 mph.
Trajectory weather: The air mass trajectories from the Edwards Plateau Texas move to the south and then
southwest over the next 24 hours from the primary area with Juniperus ashei trees out over southern Texas and eventually
into Mexico. The trajectories are associated with buoyant air rising along the trajectory as colder air flows in,
under the current air mass. Conditions will be moderate for release and good for pollen entrainment and long-distance
travel today. The winds from the Arbuckle Mountains move south as along with the cold air. The trajectories show
sinking atmospheric conditions that are not good for pollen entrainment and travel.
On Tuesday winds will continue to be from the north to northwest with colder temperatures across the region. Trajectories
from the Edwards Plateau will move more towards the south then loop towards the west moving into the Big Bend region,
onto Mexico and then towards New Mexico. Atmospheric conditions are stable to sinking as cold air invades the region.
Overall conditions for pollen release will be decline as temperatures will be in the mid to low 40s for highs across
the Plateau and just getting into the 50s in the communities along the eastern and southern Plateau edge. Poor
conditions will also occur in Oklahoma as high temperatures will only reach the mid 30s to just above 40 with trajectories
moving to the southeast.
OUTLOOK: *** Moderate threat today, Moderate conditions for pollen release;
Low threat tomorrow, Poor conditions for pollen release ***
Temperatures will reach the lower 50s today but will decline rapidly as cold air moves in from the north. Predominantly,
strong winds will carry any pollen released from southern Oklahoma southward towards eastern Texas and eventually
out over the Gulf of Mexico. Conditions today and tomorrow will be marginal and degrade with very cold air sagging
into the southern Great Plains
Trajectory Start (s) (shown by black
star on map): Sulfur, OK.
ARBUCKLE MOUNTAINS (MONDAY)
ARBUCKLE MOUNTAINS (TUESDAY)
Prepared by: Estelle
Levetin (Faculty of Biological
Science, The University
of Tulsa, 600 S. College, Tulsa, OK 74104) and Peter K Van de Water
(Department of Earth and Environmental Science, California State University Fresno, 2576 East San Ramon Avenue,
M/S ST24, Fresno CA 93740-8039). This forecast gives the anticipated future track of released Mountain
Cedar pollen, weather conditions over the region and along the forecast pathway, and an estimated time of arrival
for various metropolitan areas.
Questions: Aerobiology Lab e-mail: pollen@utulsa.edu
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