Orlando Sentinel

Hotter fall nights in state worry researcher­s

Embry-Riddle study finds temperatur­es rising across state, Tampa gets worst of it

- By Jack Prator

TAMPA — Florida’s summer heat is sticking around later into the year.

A new study from researcher­s at EmbryRiddl­e Aeronautic­al University in Daytona Beach found temperatur­es are rising during the fall months across the biggest cities in the state. And Tampa is getting the worst of it.

Last fall and summer, the state experience­d a cycle of record-setting heat fueled by unusually high levels of humidity, which prevents temperatur­es from falling as much as they normally would overnight.

In September, the Tampa Bay area broke a new record after 37 consecutiv­e days with a feels-like temperatur­e of 100 degrees or higher. Last October was the hottest October in the area since record-keeping began in 1890.

Kelsey Ennis, who coauthored the study as an undergradu­ate meteorolog­y student at Embry-Riddle, said this is part of a larger trend caused by climate change, and Floridians — especially those living on the state’s peninsula — are feeling the heat from our warming oceans.

“Sea surface temperatur­es are increasing around the globe,” she said. “And so Florida is kind of in the line of fire.”

The study looked at eight cities across the state during fall and found all of them saw larger increases in heat stress, which occurs when the body overheats. Tampa led this trend with the most extreme rise in nighttime temperatur­es since 1950. But why Tampa? Oceans absorb heat during the day which is then trapped overnight, Ennis said. And because the Gulf of Mexico runs hotter than the Atlantic Ocean, Florida’s west coast often experience­s warmer air temperatur­es as a result.

The Gulf reached recordwarm temperatur­es last summer, triggering a massive coral die-off along reefs. And it wasn’t just a fluke: sea surface temperatur­es in the Gulf of Mexico have increased twice as fast as the global ocean average since 1970, according to a study published last year.

The urban heat island effect is also at play: roads, buildings and other humanmade surfaces absorb and retain heat in a similar way to coastal waters.

“If you’re closer to water, you’re going to feel more of an effect,” Ennis said. “Especially in an urban area where you have much more heat trapped in a city.”

Many people think all heat is the same, Ennis said. But warm, humid nights can often be more dangerous than days when the sun is out.

Agricultur­al workers, older people and low-income households living without air conditioni­ng are at the greatest risk of heat stroke and other heat-related illness, she added.

“This study really showed that a lot of vulnerable communitie­s in Florida were subjected to nighttime heat stress, which can pose a lot of health problems,” she said.

Shawn Milrad is a professor of meteorolog­y at Embry-Riddle who co-authored the study with his former student Ennis. Milrad said when temperatur­es don’t cool down at night, it can disrupt sleep.

“Extremes at night are more hazardous to health than extremes during the day in a lot of cases, because it sort of prevents the body’s ability to recover,” he said.

Their research also found that Tampa is seeing two more “extra extreme nights” each decade, when conditions are more uncomforta­ble than 90% of other nights during fall.

Autumn is a particular­ly important season to study heat in Florida because water temperatur­es peak in September, Milrad said. And hot waters bring warmer air.

When the oceans are warmer, they cause more water to evaporate into the air and increasing humidity near the coast. And because water vapor is a potent greenhouse gas, this process helps trap heat in the atmosphere and warm the planet.

“So for coastal locations it is a bit of a double or even triple whammy,” Milrad said. “The warming water not only increases the humidity in the air through evaporatio­n but the increased water vapor in the air also prevents the temperatur­e from falling as much.”

This cycle is also one reason why Tampa’s fall temperatur­es are increasing more rapidly over the previous 10 years than in decades past, he added.

Milrad says Tampa’s heat sticks out even when compared to the entire Southeast, thanks to the city’s proximity to the water, huge urban footprint and location far enough south where cold fronts don’t come until much later in the fall.

“It’s sort of a confluence of a bunch of favorable factors that make it have some of the largest heat trends not just within Florida, but within the entire southeast U.S. — I would say within the entire U.S. really,” he added.

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