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IRAP-funded study focuses on hurricanes and anomalous heat in the Caribbean

Credit: NOAA photo library
Credit: NOAA photo library

A new article, published by an interdisciplinary and international team of researchers supported by CPO’s International Research and Applications Project (IRAP), focuses on heat in the aftermath of tropical cyclones in the Caribbean. 53 tropical storms and hurricanes in the Caribbean, as well as 205 city-storm events between 1991 and 2020 were analyzed, specifically looking at the temporal and spatial patterns of anomalous heat index values. The geography analyzed spanned throughout the Eastern Caribbean, including Puerto Rico in the Greater Antilles, however the large islands of Jamaica, Cuba, Hispaniola in the Greater Antilles and Trinidad and Tobago were omitted because of their proximity to landmasses that may influence heat patterns such as the United States and South America.

Heat index values were calculated using North Atlantic tropical cyclone track-data from the International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship (IBTrACS) dataset and Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Reanalysis (ERA5) hourly 0.25° latitude-longitude High Resolution (HRES) data. From those calculations, spatial heat index anomaly patterns were identified. The investigators were able to conclude that the results show that heat index anomalies following tropical cyclones can be high, have maximums that occur several days after the storm’s passage, and can be observed in locations that are not directly impacted by the storm. These results pose implications for tropical storm preparedness, specifically focusing on post-storm extreme heat events. 

This research was led by Zack Guido from the University of Arizona, Arizona Institutes for Resilient Environments and Societies, along with his colleagues Teddy Allen (University of Arizona), Simon Mason (Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology), and Pablo Méndez-Lázaro (Columbia University), and was funded by the NOAA IRAP through a competition on informing planning and prevention focused on weather and climate-sensitive health risks to U.S. economic, development, scientific and safety interests at home and abroad.

Read the article »

For more information, contact Lisa Vaughan.

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