Developing a Hail and Wind Damage Swath Event Database from Daily MODIS True Color Imagery and Storm Reports for Impact Analysis and Applications

Author:

Bell Jordan R.1,Wisinski Emily F.2,Molthan Andrew L.1,Schultz Christopher J.1,Gilligan Emma3,Sharp Kaylee G.4

Affiliation:

1. a Earth Science Branch, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama

2. b Department of Atmospheric and Earth Science, University of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, Alabama

3. c Department of Geography and Environmental Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland

4. d Earth System Science Center, University of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, Alabama

Abstract

Abstract Hail and damaging winds are two threats associated with intense and severe thunderstorms that traverse the Midwest and Great Plains during the primary growing season. In certain severe thunderstorm events, large swaths of agricultural crops are impacted, allowing the damage to be viewed from multiple satellite remote sensing platforms. Previous studies have focused on analyzing individual hail and wind damage swaths (HWDSs) using satellite remote sensing, but these swaths have never been officially archived or documented. This lack of documentation has made it difficult to analyze the spatial extent and temporal frequency of HWDSs from year to year. This study utilizes daily true color imagery from MODIS aboard NASA’s Terra and Aqua satellites and daily local storm reports from the Storm Prediction Center to build a database of HWDSs occurring in the months of May–August, for years 2000–20. This database identified 1646 HWDSs in 12 states throughout the Midwest and Great Plains, confirmed through a combination of archived severe weather warnings, radar information, and official storm reports. For each entry in the HWDS database, a geospatial outline is provided along with the most likely date of first visible damage from MODIS imagery as well as the physical characteristics and time of occurrence estimated from available warnings. This study also provides a summary of the radar characteristics for a portion of the database. This database will further the understanding of severe weather damage by hail and wind to agriculture to help understand the frequency of these events and assist in mapping the impacted areas. Significance Statement Hail and wind damage swaths (HWDSs) frequently occur during the primary growing season throughout the Midwest and Great Plains but are not yet officially documented or tracked like other severe weather impacts (e.g., tornadoes and derechos). This study describes the creation of a 21-yr HWDS event database using archived daily storm reports and daily true color satellite imagery. Once the database was completed and underwent quality checks, the research team identified spatial and temporal trends from the confirmed swaths.

Funder

ROSES 2018: Earth Science Applications: Disaster Risk Reduction and Response

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference37 articles.

1. American Farm Bureau Federation, 2023: New estimates reveal major 2022 weather disasters caused over $21 billion in crop losses date. Accessed 15 March 2023, https://www.fb.org/market-intel/new-estimates-reveal-major-2022-weather-disasters-caused-over-21-billion-in-crop-losses.

2. Constructing a multifrequency passive microwave hail retrieval and climatology in the GPM domain;Bang, S. D.,2019

3. Evaluation of approaches to identifying hail damage to crop vegetation using satellite imagery;Bell, J. R.,2016

4. Complementing optical remote sensing with synthetic aperture radar observations of hail damage swaths to agricultural crops in the central United States;Bell, J. R.,2020

5. Using Landsat to identify thunderstorm damage in agricultural regions;Bentley, M. L.,2002

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