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Dive into the research topics where Jimmy O. Adegoke is active.

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Featured researches published by Jimmy O. Adegoke.


Tellus B | 2007

An overview of regional land-use and land-cover impacts on rainfall

Roger A. Pielke; Jimmy O. Adegoke; Adriana B. Beltran-Przekurat; C. A. Hiemstra; John C. Lin; Udaysankar S. Nair; Dev Niyogi; T. E. Nobis

This paper documents the diverse role of land-use/land-cover change on precipitation. Since land conversion continues at a rapid pace, this type of human disturbance of the climate system will continue and become even more significant in the coming decades.


Monthly Weather Review | 2003

Impact of Irrigation on Midsummer Surface Fluxes and Temperature under Dry Synoptic Conditions: A Regional Atmospheric Model Study of the U.S. High Plains

Jimmy O. Adegoke; Roger A. Pielke; Joseph L. Eastman; Rezaul Mahmood; Kenneth G. Hubbard

The impact of irrigation on the surface energy budget in the U.S. high plains is investigated. Four 15-day simulations were conducted: one using a 1997 satellite-derived estimate of farmland acreage under irrigation in Nebraska (control run), two using the Olson Global Ecosystem (OGE) vegetation dataset (OGE wet run and OGE dry run), and the fourth with the Kuchler vegetation dataset (natural vegetation run) as lower boundary conditions in the Colorado State University Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (RAMS). In the control and OGE wet simulations, the topsoil in the irrigated locations, up to a depth of 0.2 m, was saturated at 0000 UTC each day for the duration of the experiment (1‐15 July 1997). In the other two runs, the soil was allowed to dry out, except when replenished naturally by rainfall. Identical observed atmospheric conditions were used along the lateral boundary in all four cases. The area-averaged model-derived quantities for the grid centered over Nebraska indicate significant differences in the surface energy fluxes between the control (irrigated) and the ‘‘dry’’ simulations. For example, a 36% increase in the surface latent heat flux and a 2.6 8C elevation in dewpoint temperature between the control run and the OGE dry run is shown. Surface sensible heat flux of the control run was 15% less and the near-ground temperature was 1.28C less compared to the OGE dry run. The differences between the control run and the natural vegetation run were similar but amplified compared to the control run‐OGE dry run comparisons. Results of statistical analyses of long-term (1921‐2000) surface temperature data from two sites representing locations of extensive irrigated and nonirrigated land uses appear to support model results presented herein of an irrigationrelated cooling in surface temperature. Growing season monthly mean and monthly mean maximum temperature data for the irrigated site indicate a steady decreasing trend in contrast to an increasing trend at the nonirrigated site.


Journal of Applied Meteorology | 2003

Simulation of St. Louis, Missouri, Land Use Impacts on Thunderstorms

Christopher M. Rozoff; William R. Cotton; Jimmy O. Adegoke

A storm-resolving version of the Regional Atmospheric Modeling System is executed over St. Louis, Missouri, on 8 June 1999, along with sophisticated boundary conditions, to simulate the urban atmosphere and its role in deep, moist convection. In particular, surface-driven low-level convergence mechanisms are investigated. Sensitivity experiments show that the urban heat island (UHI) plays the largest role in initiating deep, moist convection downwind of the city. Surface convergence is enhanced on the leeward side of the city. Increased momentum drag over the city induces convergence on the windward side of the city, but this convergence is not strong enough to initiate storms. The nonlinear interaction of urban momentum drag and the UHI causes downwind convection to erupt later, because momentum drag over the city regulates the strength of the UHI. In all simulations including a UHI, precipitation totals are enhanced downwind of St. Louis. Topography around St. Louis also affects storm development. There is a large sensitivity of simulated urban-enhanced convection to the details of the urban surface model.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2010

Impacts of land use/land cover change on climate and future research priorities.

Rezaul Mahmood; Roger A. Pielke; Kenneth G. Hubbard; Dev Niyogi; Gordon B. Bonan; Peter J. Lawrence; Richard T. McNider; Clive McAlpine; Andrés Etter; Samuel Gameda; Budong Qian; Andrew M. Carleton; Adriana B. Beltran-Przekurat; Thomas N. Chase; Arturo I. Quintanar; Jimmy O. Adegoke; Sajith Vezhapparambu; Glen Conner; Salvi Asefi; Elif Sertel; David R. Legates; Yuling Wu; Robert Hale; Oliver W. Frauenfeld; Anthony Watts; Marshall Shepherd; Chandana Mitra; Valentine G. Anantharaj; Souleymane Fall; Robert Lund

Several recommendations have been proposed for detecting land use and land cover change (LULCC) on the environment from, observed climatic records and to modeling to improve its understanding and its impacts on climate. Researchers need to detect LULCCs accurately at appropriate scales within a specified time period to better understand their impacts on climate and provide improved estimates of future climate. The US Climate Reference Network (USCRN) can be helpful in monitoring impacts of LULCC on near-surface atmospheric conditions, including temperature. The USCRN measures temperature, precipitation, solar radiation, and ground or skin temperature. It is recommended that the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) and other climate monitoring agencies develop plans and seek funds to address any monitoring biases that are identified and for which detailed analyses have not been completed.


Journal of Climate | 2007

Investigation of the Summer Climate of the Contiguous United States and Mexico Using the Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (RAMS). Part I: Model Climatology (1950–2002)

Christopher L. Castro; Roger A. Pielke; Jimmy O. Adegoke; Siegfried D. Schubert; P. Pegion

Abstract Fifty-three years of the NCEP–NCAR Reanalysis I are dynamically downscaled using the Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (RAMS) to generate a regional climate model (RCM) climatology of the contiguous United States and Mexico. Data from the RAMS simulations are compared to the recently released North American Regional Reanalysis (NARR), as well as observed precipitation and temperature data. The RAMS simulations show the value added by using a RCM in a process study framework to represent North American summer climate beyond the driving global atmospheric reanalysis. Because of its enhanced representation of the land surface topography, the diurnal cycle of convective rainfall is present. This diurnal cycle largely governs the transitions associated with the evolution of the North American monsoon with regards to rainfall, the surface energy budget, and surface temperature. The lower frequency modes of convective rainfall, though weaker, account for rainfall variability at a remote distance from...


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2002

Relations between Soil Moisture and Satellite Vegetation Indices in the U.S. Corn Belt

Jimmy O. Adegoke; Andrew M. Carleton

Abstract Satellite-derived vegetation indices extracted over locations representative of midwestern U.S. cropland and forest for the period 1990–94 are analyzed to determine the sensitivity of the indices to neutron probe soil moisture measurements of the Illinois Climate Network (ICN). The deseasoned (i.e., departures from multiyear mean annual cycle) soil moisture measurements are shown to be weakly correlated with the deseasoned full resolution (1 km × 1 km) normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and fractional vegetation cover (FVC) data over both land cover types. The association, measured by the Pearson-moment-correlation coefficient, is stronger over forest than over cropland during the growing season (April–September). The correlations improve successively when the NDVI and FVC pixel data are aggregated to 3 km × 3 km, 5 km × 5 km, and 7 km × 7 km areas. The improved correlations are partly explained by the reduction in satellite navigation errors as spatial aggregation occurs, as well as t...


Extreme Events and Natural Hazards: The Complexity Perspective | 2013

Dealing With Complexity and Extreme Events Using a Bottom-Up, Resource-Based Vulnerability Perspective

Roger A. Pielke; Robert L. Wilby; Dev Niyogi; Faisal Hossain; Koji Dairuku; Jimmy O. Adegoke; George Kallos; Timothy R. Seastedt; Katharine N. Suding

We discuss the adoption of a bottom-up, resource-based vulnerability approach in evaluating the effect of climate and other environmental and societal threats to societally critical resources. This vulnerability concept requires the determination of the major threats to local and regional water, food, energy, human health, and ecosystem function resources from extreme events including those from climate but also from other social and environmental issues. After these threats are identified for each resource, then the relative risks can be compared with other risks in order to adopt optimal preferred mitigation/adaptation strategies. This is a more inclusive way of assessing risks, including from climate variability and climate change, than using the outcome vulnerability approach adopted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). A contextual vulnerability assessment using the bottom-up, resource-based framework is a more inclusive approach for policy makers to adopt effective mitigation and adaptation methodologies to deal with the complexity of the spectrum of social and environmental extreme events that will occurinthecomingdecadesastherangeofthreatsareassessed,beyondjustthefocus on CO2 and a few other greenhouse gases as emphasized in the IPCC assessments.


Environmental Research Letters | 2015

Projections of rapidly rising surface temperatures over Africa under low mitigation

Francois Engelbrecht; Jimmy O. Adegoke; Mary-Jane Bopape; Mogesh Naidoo; Rebecca M. Garland; Marcus Thatcher; John L. McGregor; Jack Katzfey; Micha Werner; Charles Ichoku; Charles K. Gatebe

An analysis of observed trends in African annual-average near-surface temperatures over the last five decades reveals drastic increases, particularly over parts of the subtropics and central tropical Africa. Over these regions, temperatures have been rising at more than twice the global rate of temperature increase. An ensemble of high-resolution downscalings, obtained using a single regional climate model forced with the sea-surface temperatures and sea-ice fields of an ensemble of global circulation model (GCM) simulations, is shown to realistically represent the relatively strong temperature increases observed in subtropical southern and northern Africa. The amplitudes of warming are generally underestimated, however. Further warming is projected to occur during the 21st century, with plausible increases of 4?6 ?C over the subtropics and 3?5 ?C over the tropics by the end of the century relative to present-day climate under the A2 (a low mitigation) scenario of the Special Report on Emission Scenarios. High impact climate events such as heat-wave days and high fire-danger days are consistently projected to increase drastically in their frequency of occurrence. General decreases in soil-moisture availability are projected, even for regions where increases in rainfall are plausible, due to enhanced levels of evaporation. The regional dowscalings presented here, and recent GCM projections obtained for Africa, indicate that African annual-averaged temperatures may plausibly rise at about 1.5 times the global rate of temperature increase in the subtropics, and at a somewhat lower rate in the tropics. These projected increases although drastic, may be conservative given the model underestimations of observed temperature trends. The relatively strong rate of warming over Africa, in combination with the associated increases in extreme temperature events, may be key factors to consider when interpreting the suitability of global mitigation targets in terms of African climate change and climate change adaptation in Africa.


Marine Geodesy | 2007

Satellite-Based Assessment of the Extent and Changes in the Mangrove Ecosystem of the Niger Delta

Godstime K. James; Jimmy O. Adegoke; Ekechukwu Saba; Peter Nwilo; Joseph Akinyede

This study was carried out with the primary aim of understanding how the mangrove ecosystem in the Niger Delta has been altered recently. Specifically, we determined the spatial extent of the mangrove forest in the Niger Delta using remotely sensed satellite data and estimated changes in the spatial extent of the forest from the mid-1980s through 2003. Overall, about 21,340 hectares of Mangrove forest was lost over the study period. Fieldwork confirmed that these losses were primarily due to urbanization, dredging activities, activities of the oil and gas industries, and the spread of Nypa Palm (Nypa frutican) plant species.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2003

Sensitivity of Model-Generated Daytime Surface Heat Fluxes over Snow to Land-Cover Changes

John E. Strack; Roger A. Pielke; Jimmy O. Adegoke

Abstract Snow cover can significantly suppress daytime temperatures by increasing the surface albedo and limiting the surface temperature to 0°C. The strength of this effect is dependent upon how well the snow can cover, or mask, the underlying surface. In regions where tall vegetation protrudes through a shallow layer of snow, the temperature-reducing effects of the snow will be suppressed since the protruding vegetation will absorb solar radiation and emit an upward turbulent heat flux. This means that an atmospheric model must have a reasonable representation of the land cover, as well as be able to correctly calculate snow depth, if an accurate simulation of surface heat fluxes, air temperatures, and boundary layer structure is to be made. If too much vegetation protrudes through the snow, then the surface sensible heat flux will be too large and the air temperatures will be too high. In this study four simulations are run with the Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (RAMS 4.30) for a snow event that...

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Roger A. Pielke

University of Colorado Boulder

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Charles Ichoku

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Andrew M. Carleton

Pennsylvania State University

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Charles K. Gatebe

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Godstime K. James

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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Udaysankar S. Nair

University of Alabama in Huntsville

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C. A. Hiemstra

Colorado State University

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