2012
DOI: 10.1007/s10933-012-9635-0
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Regional climate gradients in precipitation and temperature in response to climate teleconnections in the Greater Everglades ecosystem of South Florida

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Cited by 24 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Coastal effects cause mean minimum temperatures to vary by more than 4°C across the study area, with the northwest experiencing the coldest temperatures and the south and east the warmest. Mean annual precipitation decreases from about 1400 mm per year in the northeast to 1100 mm in the southwest (Moses et al, 2013). Seasonality in rainfall is pronounced, with 60 percent of annual rainfall concentrated between June and September (Duever et al, 1994).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Coastal effects cause mean minimum temperatures to vary by more than 4°C across the study area, with the northwest experiencing the coldest temperatures and the south and east the warmest. Mean annual precipitation decreases from about 1400 mm per year in the northeast to 1100 mm in the southwest (Moses et al, 2013). Seasonality in rainfall is pronounced, with 60 percent of annual rainfall concentrated between June and September (Duever et al, 1994).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Florida Keys are drier than the rest of south Florida, and the variable proximity of marine waters, warmed by passage of the Gulf Stream, adds further climatic heterogeneity across the south Florida region (Moses et al. ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, soil nutrient availability, particularly phosphorus, is exceptionally high in Everglades marsh hammocks (Ross et al 2006, Wetzel et al 2009) compared with hammock patches in the Florida Keys, whereas elevated groundwater salinity is a stressor for coastal forests in the Florida Keys that is absent in the interior Everglades (Subedi 2017). The Florida Keys are drier than the rest of south Florida, and the variable proximity of marine waters, warmed by passage of the Gulf Stream, adds further climatic heterogeneity across the south Florida region (Moses et al 2013).…”
Section: Study Sitementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Florida is no exception, and the influence can mainly be seen on summertime precipitation (Enfield et al 2001) and Atlantic hurricanes (Trenberth and Shea 2006). Studies have shown that wintertime Florida precipitation shows no significant correlation with the AMO (Moses et al 2013). At least twice as many tropical storms mature into hurricanes during AMO warm phases compared to AMO cold phases .…”
Section: The Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…17.6 shows the 10-year running mean Central Florida precipitation anomalies from 1905 to 2010 (top) and the 10-year running mean AMO index (bottom) (Figure adapted from Enfield et al 2001). The main signatures for the AMO can be seen for summertime precipitation over Florida; however, Moses et al (2013) noted that the AMO can also account for some temperature variability in summertime (daytime high temperatures) in Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Belle Glade (about 15 to 20%). Hu et al (2011) discussed the influence of the AMO on large-scale circulation fields, focusing on the summer season impacts on North American Precipitation.…”
Section: The Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillationmentioning
confidence: 99%