Doubtful Daymet data in Mexico
Posted: Sat Jun 20, 2020 2:36 am America/New_York
Hi,
(I believe I'm in the right forum to ask Daymet-related questions. My apologies if this is not the case)
I'm a biologist looking to obtain daily site-specific weather estimate in Baja California (Mexico) for the years 2011-2015. I used both the single pixel extraction tool (https://daymet.ornl.gov/single-pixel/) and the daymetr package to obtain data from 18 different locations across the peninsula (9 study sites and 9 nearby weather stations).
See the image attached here obtained with the single pixel extraction tool. These are daily temperature estimation at the ___location of a weather station in the town of San Bartolo. It looks to me that the temperature data cannot be trusted after the year 2012: the variation between days increases suddenly and the estimates reach unlikely values (maximum temperature below 0°C) in this area. I also noticed that the value would not pass 50°C, and this is not a display problem, data obtained with daymetr show the same pattern.
The pattern is the same across all the other locations in Baja California, Mexico, that I am interested in. I found daily maximum (not even minimum) temperature estimates at other study sites being around -20°C which is impossible to happen without killing a lot of frost-sensitive plants in the area, which I know didn't happened.
While I was looking for weather station data on the NOAA website, I found that data for many weather stations in Mexico are unavailable after the year 2012.
So my questions are:
- Do you know why the Daymet meteorological observations behave like this past 2012?
- Is this related to the unavailability of observations from weather stations in Mexico (seen with NOAA)?
- Are there other platforms to obtain Mexican weather stations past 2012?
- Is there any alternative to obtain daily site-specific near-surface maximum temperature data in Mexico?
Thanks,
Sincerely
Finn Piatscheck
(I believe I'm in the right forum to ask Daymet-related questions. My apologies if this is not the case)
I'm a biologist looking to obtain daily site-specific weather estimate in Baja California (Mexico) for the years 2011-2015. I used both the single pixel extraction tool (https://daymet.ornl.gov/single-pixel/) and the daymetr package to obtain data from 18 different locations across the peninsula (9 study sites and 9 nearby weather stations).
See the image attached here obtained with the single pixel extraction tool. These are daily temperature estimation at the ___location of a weather station in the town of San Bartolo. It looks to me that the temperature data cannot be trusted after the year 2012: the variation between days increases suddenly and the estimates reach unlikely values (maximum temperature below 0°C) in this area. I also noticed that the value would not pass 50°C, and this is not a display problem, data obtained with daymetr show the same pattern.
The pattern is the same across all the other locations in Baja California, Mexico, that I am interested in. I found daily maximum (not even minimum) temperature estimates at other study sites being around -20°C which is impossible to happen without killing a lot of frost-sensitive plants in the area, which I know didn't happened.
While I was looking for weather station data on the NOAA website, I found that data for many weather stations in Mexico are unavailable after the year 2012.
So my questions are:
- Do you know why the Daymet meteorological observations behave like this past 2012?
- Is this related to the unavailability of observations from weather stations in Mexico (seen with NOAA)?
- Are there other platforms to obtain Mexican weather stations past 2012?
- Is there any alternative to obtain daily site-specific near-surface maximum temperature data in Mexico?
Thanks,
Sincerely
Finn Piatscheck