The University of Tulsa

Mountain Cedar Pollen Forecast

Metropolitan Area

Exposure Risk

Oklahoma City

Moderate to High

Tulsa

Moderate

St. Louis MO

Low

 

Date Issued: 29 January 2014


Mountain Cedar Location(s): Arbuckle Mountains, OK


Regional Weather: Wednesday, January 29 – TX/OK:. The region today will begin very cold with the Edwards Plateau in the teens and the surrounding communities in the mid to low twenties. Skies will be clear as the push of cold air is far south over the northern Gulf of Mexico and to the east through northern Florida. Today will be a warm up from the cold conditions with sunny skies across the region and temperatures building back into the upper 40s. Winds will be from the south at light conditions over the Edwards Plateau and to the north into southern Oklahoma. Along the edge of the Plateau northeasterly breezes will remain early eventually switching to a southerly flow overnight. Winds will be light building a bit to moderate conditions tonight. Then tomorrow much stronger winds will build during the day. Overnight temperatures will fall into the 30s across the region, being much warmer than the last few evenings. Skies will remain mostly clear to clear with sunny to mostly sunny skies on Thursday. Tomorrow the warming continues with the western Edwards Plateau heading back into the 70 degree range. The remaining areas of the Edwards Plateau will be in the upper 60s. Winds will build from the south to moderately strong conditions during the day. 20 to 25 mile an hour winds will be common across the area with gusts as high as 35 miles per hour in the Dallas/Ft. Worth metro area. The warm southerly breezes will build in partly cloudy conditions tomorrow night with low temperatures mild. In Oklahoma and across the western Edwards Plateau the temperatures will fall into the upper 30s and across the central Texas region lows in the mid to upper 40s will be common.

Trajectory weather: The air mass over Texas will dictate the conditions in southern Oklahoma. Today will begin with sunny to mostly sunny conditions and a southerly flow establishing itself over the region. Cold conditions last night will begin to wane as warmer air along with clear skies facilitates the overall warming. The high temperatures today will be heading into the upper 40s in southern Oklahoma. With the establishment of the south to north flow, winds will begin to build with moderate conditions early then becoming stronger this afternoon. Tonight and tomorrow will see winds sustained at moderate to strong conditions. Tomorrow afternoon winds are expected to be in the 20 to 25 miles per hour range. The overall flow will take the trajectories northward across Oklahoma and into the upper Midwest. Cold conditions overnight may retard the release of pollen early today as the trees begin their warming. Traditionally we have felt that conditions in the low 40 degree range are not particularly good for pollination. However, there has been lots of pollen being recorded recently even though some of the conditions have been marginal. Because of this, we expect the morning to begin with low levels but that as the day progresses greater amounts will be released with warming. With the building winds then entrainment and travel will occur. Areas to the north should be in line to receive pollen from not only the Texas region but also from southern Oklahoma source regions. Tomorrow, stiff winds and warm conditions will provide even better conditions for release, entrainment and travel

OUTLOOK: *** Moderate to High Threat Today and High Threat Tomorrow *** Conditions for pollen release today will start with cold conditions but the region will be warming under clear, sunny skies. Winds will begin the day moderate and build overnight towards breezy conditions tomorrow. With the warming the trees will see temperatures this afternoon at levels that we often associate with pollination. Winds will be dominantly from the south and any pollen released and entrained within the atmosphere will move towards the north. The lingering effects of the cold conditions over the last couple of days will keep the trajectories initially near ground level, thus pollen should be more susceptible to impaction and removal from the air stream early but this will wane as warming continues. Tonight and tomorrow, especially, the winds will build to strong levels. Temperatures are heading up with high temperatures tomorrow in the low 60s and mid 60s to low 70s to the south in the Texas populations. The trajectories will stay near the ground today, but tomorrow with warmer conditions they will be more buoyant and thus travel further. Both days entrained pollen will be pushed northwards across Oklahoma, eastern Kansas towards the border between Missouri and Iowa. We continue to watch to see if and by how much the pollen counts rebound as the warm-up occurs this week. As we look back to the last really good conditions pollen had begun to diminish a bit We continue to test the overall progress of the pollination season, and to date we have not observed an significant drop off.


Trajectory Start (s) (shown by black star on map): Davis, OK.



Prepared by: Estelle Levetin (Faculty of Biological Science, The University of Tulsa, 800 S. Tucker Dr., 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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