6533b822fe1ef96bd127d95b
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Alder pollen in Finland ripens after a short exposure to warm days in early spring, showing biennial variation in the onset of pollen ripening
Marje PrankMarje PrankAnnika SaartoAnna-mari PessiEric Le TortorecEric Le TortorecTapio LinkosaloTapio Linkosalosubject
0106 biological sciencesAtmospheric Science010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesta1171Atmospheric sciencesmedicine.disease_causeAlnus01 natural sciencesAlderPollenotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineMonte Carlo resamplingPrecipitationsiitepöly0105 earth and related environmental sciencespollen seasonGlobal and Planetary Changefloweringbiologyta114kukintaAnomaly (natural sciences)ta1183food and beveragesHumidityForestryRipeningennusteetmodelingalderbiology.organism_classificationta4112leppäMonte Carlo -menetelmätAlder pollenClimatologyta1181Short exposureAgronomy and Crop Science010606 plant biology & botanydescription
Abstract We developed a temperature sum model to predict the daily pollen release of alder, based on pollen data collected with pollen traps at seven locations in Finland over the years 2000–2014. We estimated the model parameters by minimizing the sum of squared errors (SSE) of the model, with weights that put more weight on binary recognition of daily presence or absence of pollen. The model results suggest that alder pollen ripens after a couple of warm days in February, while the whole pollen release period typically takes up to 4 weeks. We tested the model residuals against air humidity, precipitation and wind speed, but adding these meteorological features did not improve the model prediction capacity. Our model was able to predict the onset of pollen season with similar accuracy as models describing only the start of the pollen release period (average prediction error 8.3, median 5.0 days), while for the end of the pollen release period the accuracy of our predictions was not as good. We split the pollen data into odd and even years, and fitted our model separately to each half. Difference in the parameter values suggests a biennial behavior in the onset of pollen ripening, with almost two weeks of difference in the modeled starting date of the pollen development. Monte Carlo resampling of the observation data confirmed that the difference is not just a random anomaly in the data.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-12-01 | Agricultural and Forest Meteorology |