Skip to main content

Cloud Water Interception in Hawaiʻi - Part 2: Mapping Current and Future Exchange of Water Between Clouds and Vegetation in Hawaiʻi's Mountains

Cloud Water Interception in Hawaiʻi: Building Spatial Pattern Maps for the Present-day Climate and Projected Changes by the Later 21st Century using the Hawaiʻi Regional Climate Model

Dates

Start Date
2015-10-01
End Date
2017-09-30
Release Date
2015

Summary

Clouds often come in contact with vegetation (often named fogs) within a certain elevation range on Hawaiʻi’s mountains. Propelled by strong winds, cloud droplets are driven onto the stems and leaves of plants where they are deposited. Some of the water that accumulates on the plants in this way drips to the ground, adding additional water over and above the water supplied by rainfall. Prior observations show that the amount of cloud water intercepted by vegetation is substantial, but also quite variable from place to place. It is, therefore, important to create a map for the complex spatial patterns of cloud water interception (CWI) in Hawaiʻi. In this project, we proposed to create the CWI map at 0.8-km resolution based on the 20-year [...]

Child Items (4)

Contacts

Principal Investigator :
Yuqing Wang
Cooperator/Partner :
Chunxi Zhang
Funding Agency :
Pacific Islands CSC
CMS Group :
Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CASC) Program

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

KohalaMountains_HI_AlanCressler.jpg
“Kohala Mountains, Hawaii - Credit: Alan Cressler”
thumbnail 236.26 KB image/jpeg

Project Extension

projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2015
totalFunds100705.0
year2016
totalFunds90877.0
parts
typeAward Type
valueGrant
typeAward Number
valueG15AP00166
totalFunds191582.0

Additional Information

Alternate Titles

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...