Summer Fog Frequency Patterns and Impact on Intertidal Organisms around Washington Coast from GOES-17 Satellite Imagery, Field Photos, and Field Sensors
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Nguyen, Autumn
Lundquist, Jessica
Pestana, Steven
Schwat, Eli
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Abstract
Fog can offer protection for intertidal organisms around the coast of Washington when
low tides occur coincidently with warm temperatures. This protection becomes more
important as extreme heatwaves are expected to increase with global warming. Using
Cloud Top Height products from NASA and NOAA’s GOES-17 satellite, we created
frequency maps and timeseries of fog and low clouds cover (FLCC) during the summer
months of 2022 over Washington’s coastal areas. Our results showed that FLCC
increased significantly in both coastal and ocean locations from May to August. On San
Juan Island, FLCC was least frequent in the Northeast area, which contained the town of
Friday Harbor. Intertidal organisms around False Bay and Cattle Point had protection
from FLCC against heat stress during around 50% of the cumulative midday low tide
hours in summer 2022, while it was only around 14% for the ones around the UW Friday
Harbor Lab. We also used photos from our field cameras to acquire more accurate fog
presence at local sites on the island. We trained an SVC Machine Learning model to do
binary classification on all the photos, and the results were compared with the FLCC
presence results that we inferred from satellite data. Comparisons suggested that we have
yet to be able to use the satellite’s Cloud Top Height products to make conclusions about
FLCC presence in a small-scale area at a specific timestamp, but we can use them to
make good estimation of FLCC patterns over time at large spatial scales from the
products.
