The University of Tulsa
Mountain Cedar Pollen Forecast
Metropolitan Area |
Exposure Risk |
Oklahoma City |
Low |
Tulsa |
Low |
St. Louis MO |
Low |
Date Issued: 21 January 2008
Mountain Cedar Location(s): Arbuckle Mountains, OK
Regional Weather: Monday, January 21 TX/OK: The
weather today and tomorrow will be cold to the north and cool southward as systems move through the region this
week. The region will experience cold temperatures throughout Oklahoma with high temperatures in the low to mid
40s today and mostly cloudy skies. Winds will be out of the south during the day today in Oklahoma, but shifting
to the northwest to northeast overnight. Across Oklahoma there is a 30% chance of precipitation today increasing
to 40% overnight. Overnight temperatures in the 20s will result in any precipitation falling as freezing rain
or light snow. High temperatures tomorrow will be even cooler barely getting into the high 30s to lowest 40s.
Skies will remain partly cloudy although the chance of precipitation is reduced. Low temperatures Tuesday night
will return to the lower 20s and upper teens. In Texas, temperatures today will be in the upper 40s to upper 50s
across the Edwards Plateau and in the mid to upper 50's in the surrounding edge communities. Skies will be Cloudy
with a 20% chance of precipitation across the Plateau and a 50% chance of precipitation in the edge communities
of Austin and San Antonio. Winds across central Texas will be from the south, moderate to strong (15/20 mph).
Overnight skies will continue to be cloudy with light to moderate winds from the southwest on the Plateau and
the southeast along the southern and eastern edge of the Edwards Plateau. Tomorrows temperatures will remain relatively
constant with slight cooling to the northwest. Skies will remain cloudy to partly cloudy with a 20% chance of
precipitation across the region, possibly falling as snow in areas across the Edwards Plateau tomorrow night.
Winds will remain moderate switching from the southern quadrant to a more northeasterly direction.
Trajectory weather: Conditions today and tomorrow will degrade towards a front moving through on Wednesday.
Today southern winds will move trajectories due north but will change late today and into tonight towards the
south as winds shift to the north. Winds from the eastern portion of the Edward Plateau will start from the south
then shift towards the southwest overnight and into the northern quadrant tomorrow morning. The air mass trajectories
move from the Edwards Plateau northward on southern winds which will then turn across northern Texas and southern
most Oklahoma then back over the Edwards Plateau. Populations in the Arbuckle Mountains will be influenced by
southern winds that then turn southward back over north Texas. Across the region, skies will be partly to mostly
cloudy with a steep temperature gradient from cool to cold temperatures in Oklahoma to temperatures in the 60's
in San Antonio. Wind characteristics today and tomorrow are initially cold and heavy which is poor for entrainment
and travel but more buoyant tomorrow. Cool temperatures north, and the heightened chance of precipitation across
the region suggests poor conditions for release and only slightly better conditions for entrainment if any pollen
is released. Weather conditions make for a forecast of poor for pollen release and entrainment from the Arbuckle
Mountains population today into central Oklahoma. Tomorrow temperatures will be colder not getting out of the
30's with partly cloudy skies continuing.
OUTLOOK: *** Low threat today, Poor conditions for pollen release today,
Poor conditions for pollen entrainment and travel today *** Cool temperatures today with cold temperatures
overnight and cloudy skies with a chance of precipitation, makes for poor conditions for pollen release in Oklahoma.
Tomorrow winds will shift toward the south with poor conditions for pollen release and entrainment. Moderate atmospheric
conditions and temperatures today but with a heightened chance of precipitation and mostly cloudy to cloudy skies
will dampen pollen release and entrainment. Similar conditions are expected for tomorrow.
Trajectory Start (s) (shown by black
star on map): Sulfur, OK.
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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