An Evaluation of the OpenWeatherMap API versus INMET Using Weather Data from Two Brazilian Cities: Recife and Campina Grande

Author:

Musah AnwarORCID,Dutra Livia Màrcia Mosso,Aldosery AishaORCID,Browning Ella,Ambrizzi TercioORCID,Borges Iuri Valerio GracianoORCID,Tunali Merve,Başibüyük Selma,Yenigün OrhanORCID,Moreno Giselle Machado Magalhaes,da Silva Ana Clara Gomes,dos Santos Wellington PinheiroORCID,de Lima Clarisse Lins,Massoni Tiago,Jones Kate Elizabeth,Campos Luiza CintraORCID,Kostkova Patty

Abstract

Certain weather conditions are inadvertently related to increased population of various mosquitoes. In order to predict the burden of mosquito populations in the Global South, it is imperative to integrate weather-related risk factors into such predictive models. There are a lot of online open-source weather platforms that provide historical, current and future weather forecasts which can be utilised for general predictions, and these electronic sources serve as an alternate option for weather data when physical weather stations are inaccessible (or inactive). Before using data from such online source, it is important to assess the accuracy against some baseline measure. In this paper, we therefore evaluated the accuracy and suitability of weather forecasts of two parameters namely temperature and humidity from the OpenWeatherMap API (an online weather platform) and compared them with actual measurements collected from the Brazilian weather stations (INMET). The evaluation was focused on two Brazilian cites, namely, Recife and Campina Grande. The intention is to prepare an early warning model which will harness data from OpenWeatherMap API for mosquito prediction.

Funder

UK Research and Innovation

Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey

São Paulo Research Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Information Systems and Management,Computer Science Applications,Information Systems

Reference28 articles.

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