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Journal Article

Citation

Cao W, Rohli RV, Han F, Vega AJ, Bushra N, Nyman JA. Appl. Geogr. 2021; 136: e102587.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.apgeog.2021.102587

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The regional-to-synoptic-scale steering atmospheric circulation is important for advecting energy, mass, and momentum across space, with the near-surface wind being the local manifestation of this circulation. The local winds can affect phenomena of economic, ecological, and/or aesthetic values, such as bird migrations and prescribed burns to restore bird habitats. The purpose of this research is to classify the days from 1979 to 2018 based on circulation patterns near the surface (i.e., 1000-hPa) and at the highest level of airflow affecting bird migration (i.e., 700-hPa), across the Gulf Coast region of the United States. The resulting patterns, derived from Ward's clustering method on rotated principal component scores, are used as input in a fire management plan to restore niches for bird species such as black and yellow rails and mottled ducks.

RESULTS suggest that for the (near-surface) 1000-hPa level, a classification system consisting of eight circulation types maximizes the between-group variability while minimizing the within-group variability, with a total of 95.8 percent of the dataset variance explained, and reasonable correspondence with existing manual, subjective and semi-automated techniques. At the 700-hPa level, a system of eight circulation types was derived, explaining 95.05 percent of the dataset variance. In general, the western U.S. Gulf of Mexico arc is more likely than the eastern to respond to synoptic control in the form of weather types, while the eastern region may have more influence from local-to-meso-scale land and sea breezes. These results will assist in optimizing the success of controlled burn conditions while enhancing efforts to minimize advection to populated areas.


Language: en

Keywords

Atmospheric circulation variability; Automated synoptic classification; Bird migration; Prescribed marsh burns; Principal components analysis; United States Gulf of Mexico coast

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