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Author | Gouillon, F. | ||||
Title | Internal wave generation over a ridge using the HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) | Type | $loc['typeConference Article'] | ||
Year | 2008 | Publication | AGU, Orlando, FL | Abbreviated Journal | |
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Call Number | COAPS @ mfield @ | Serial | 689 | ||
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Author | Gouillon, F.; Dukhovskoy, D. D.; Morey, S. L.; O'Brien, J. J. | ||||
Title | Modeling tides in a semi-enclosed basin: A case study of the Gulf of Mexico | Type | $loc['typeReport'] | ||
Year | 2006 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
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Publisher | World Meteorological Organization | Place of Publication | Geneva, Switzerland, | Editor | Cote, J. |
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Series Editor | Series Title | Research Activities in Atmospheric and Ocean Modeling, Report No. 36 | Abbreviated Series Title | ||
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Funding | ONR, NASA | Approved | $loc['no'] | ||
Call Number | COAPS @ mfield @ | Serial | 925 | ||
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Author | Gould, W.J.; Smith, S.R. | ||||
Title | Research vessels: Underutilized assets for climate observations | Type | $loc['typeJournal Article'] | ||
Year | 2006 | Publication | Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | Abbreviated Journal | Eos Trans. AGU |
Volume | 87 | Issue | 22 | Pages | 214 |
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ISSN | 0096-3941 | ISBN | Medium | ||
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Funding | NOAA | Approved | $loc['no'] | ||
Call Number | COAPS @ mfield @ | Serial | 710 | ||
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Author | Green, P. M. | ||||
Title | Regional Analysis of Canadian, Alaskan, and Mexican Precipitation and Temperature for ENSO Impact | Type | $loc['typeReport'] | ||
Year | 1996 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 73 | ||
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Publisher | FSU COAPS | Place of Publication | Tallahassee, FL | Editor | |
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Series Editor | Series Title | COAPS Report Series | Abbreviated Series Title | ||
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Call Number | COAPS @ mfield @ | Serial | 717 | ||
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Author | Green, P.; Legler, D. M.; Miranda, C.; O'Brien, J. J. | ||||
Title | The North American Climate Patterns Associated with El Nino-Southern Oscillation | Type | $loc['typeReport'] | ||
Year | 1997 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 8 | ||
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Publisher | Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies | Place of Publication | Tallahassee, FL | Editor | |
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Series Editor | Series Title | COAPS Technical Report 97-1 | Abbreviated Series Title | ||
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Funding | ONR, NASA, NOAA | Approved | $loc['no'] | ||
Call Number | COAPS @ mfield @ | Serial | 727 | ||
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Author | Griffin, M. | ||||
Title | Extreme temperatures (2007-2008) | Type | $loc['typeNewspaper Article'] | ||
Year | 2008 | Publication | Red-Cross/Florida Emergency Management Hazardous Weather Awareness Week Brochure | Abbreviated Journal | |
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Call Number | COAPS @ mfield @ | Serial | 688 | ||
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Author | Griffin, M. L.; Smith, S. R. | ||||
Title | Polarstern Data Quality Control Report: May 1993 – November 1996 | Type | $loc['typeReport'] | ||
Year | 2001 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
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Series Editor | Series Title | RVSMDC Report 01-01, Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies, The Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, 32306-2840 | Abbreviated Series Title | ||
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Call Number | COAPS @ mfield @ | Serial | 811 | ||
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Author | Groenen, D. | ||||
Title | The Effects of Climate Change on the Pests and Diseases of Coffee Crops in Mesoamerica | Type | $loc['typeJournal Article'] | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | Journal of Climatology & Weather Forecasting | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 6 | Issue | 3 | Pages | |
Keywords | Coffee; Pests and diseases; Mesoamerica; Climate | ||||
Abstract | Coffee is an in-demand commodity that is being threatened by climate change. Increasing temperatures and rainfall variability are predicted in the region of Mexico and Central America (Mesoamerica). This region is plagued with pests and diseases that have already caused millions of dollars in damages and losses to the coffee industry.This paper examines three pests that negatively affect coffee plants: the coffee borer beetle, the black twig borer,and nematodes. In addition, this paper examines three diseases that can destroy coffee crops: bacterial blight,coffee berry disease, and coffee leaf rust. This paper will review the literature on how these pests and diseases are predicted to affect coffee crops under climate change models. In general, increased temperatures will increase the spread of pest and disease in coffee crops. Projected decreased rainfall in Honduras and Nicaragua may decrease the spread of pest and disease. However, these are complex issues which still require further study. | ||||
Address | Climatol Weather Forecasting | ||||
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Language | English | Summary Language | Original Title | ||
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ISSN | 2332-2594 | ISBN | Medium | ||
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Funding | Approved | $loc['no'] | |||
Call Number | COAPS @ user @ | Serial | 964 | ||
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Author | Groenen, Danielle Elizabeth | ||||
Title | Diagnosing the Atmospheric Phenomena Associated with the Onset and Demise of the Rainy Season in Mesoamerica | Type | $loc['typeJournal Article'] | ||
Year | 2019 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
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Abstract | Mexico and Central America (Mesoamerica) are situated in a complex and unique geographical position with the Caribbean Sea to the East and the tropical Eastern Pacific Ocean to the West. The weather patterns of this region are driven by winds, temperatures, moisture, and orography of several mountain ranges. This study finds the dates of the onset and demise of rainfall regimes on a specific day using NASA’s Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) rainfall for years 1998–2012, area-averaged over land. Using NASA’s MERRA-2 Reanalysis data, we also look at the phenomenology of the triggers of the rainy season onset and demise on the daily time-scale instead of the monthly scales used by previous studies. We find that the Mesoamerican Rainy Season can be distinguished into two parts: the Early Spring Rainfall (ESR) associated with light rains and the Late Spring Rainfall (LSR) associated with heavy rains. Two algorithms are used to obtain these rainy season distinctions. A new algorithm was developed during this study, called the SLOPE algorithm, to calculate when the rain rates first start to increase. In the second method, the daily cumulative anomalies of rainfall are compared to the climatological rainfall to find the time of onset of the heavy rains, called the MINCA algorithm. To better understand the phenomenology associated with the timing of the rainfall, we look at the monsoon trough, moisture flux convergence, moist static energy anomalies, and the weakening/strengthening of the winds associated with the Caribbean Low-Level Jet and Panama Jet. The light rain rates begin, on average, in mid-March, approximately one month after the peak of the winter Caribbean Low-Level Jet and the Panama Jet. The ramp-up between the light rains and heavy rains is associated with a significant weakening of both jets and the northward progression of a monsoon trough off the western coast of Central America. The heavy rain rates begin, on average, in mid-May, and are associated with the timing when the Panama Jet goes to near zero magnitude and a strong monsoon trough in the eastern Pacific. At the demise of the rainfall, approximately in mid-November, the Panama Jet strengthens again, the total moisture flux convergence decreases significantly, and the monsoon trough retreats southward and eastward. The results of this study have positive implications in agriculture and water resources for Mesoamerica, as this information may help resource managers better plan and adapt to climate variability. |
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Call Number | COAPS @ user @ | Serial | 1085 | ||
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Author | Guerra, L.A.A.; Paiva, A.M.; Chassignet, E.P. | ||||
Title | On the translation of Agulhas rings to the western South Atlantic Ocean | Type | $loc['typeJournal Article'] | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers | Abbreviated Journal | Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers |
Volume | 139 | Issue | Pages | 104-113 | |
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Abstract | The shedding of Agulhas rings is the primary process connecting the Indian and Atlantic oceans. The rings transport warm and salty waters that feed the surface limb of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. Early studies suggest that Agulhas rings decay and diffuse their contents within the South Atlantic subtropical gyre. In this paper, we update the ring census using an automated algorithm to detect and track eddies over more than 23 years of satellite altimetry data (1993-2016) and calculate their main characteristics. While 140 rings spawned from the Agulhas Retroflection, their following splitting and merging resulted in 74 long-lived rings that crossed the Walvis Ridge and translated towards the west. Eventually, three rings reached the western boundary. For one of them, we use in situ measurements to document its interaction with the Brazil Current and two cyclonic eddies, which resulted in a current velocity increase by three times. Although already hypothesized, this interaction had not been demonstrated with in situ evidence until now. | ||||
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ISSN | 0967-0637 | ISBN | Medium | ||
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Funding | Approved | $loc['no'] | |||
Call Number | COAPS @ user @ | Serial | 994 | ||
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