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©Kondinin Group Reproduction in whole or part is not permitted without permission. Climate and sustainability: weather predictions FreecalL 1800 677 761 Figure 1 Different cloud types High clouds Cirrus Cirrostratus Cirrocumulus (mackerel sky) 7000 metres Anvil top 23,000 feet Halo around sun Altostratus (sun dimly visible) Altocumulus middle clouds 6500 feet 2000 metres Cumulonimbus Nimbostratus low clouds clouds with vertical development Stratus Stratocumulus Steady precipitation Cumulus Showery precipitation The altitude of a cloud, and thereby the impact on the weather, can be determined by the form it takes. Source: Geelong Weather Services and Clyve Herbert. ‘Read’ the sky to be prepared for rain, hail or shine Lindsay Smail geelong weather services At a glance What to look for in cloud cover: High cirrus clouds — as long as this high cloud remains overhead the weather will stay dry. Middle-level clouds — if clouds start to develop castle turret-like growths on top, then rainfall or thunderstorms are developing. Low clouds — if stratus clouds start to become thicker and lower, they often create a dark and overcast sky and potentially generate moderate rainfalls. Vertical formations — a thick rain curtain with lightning bolts interspersed can be seen. Clouds that deflate at the front and build up at the back foreshadow a violent wind and lashing rain squalls. An understanding of cloud types and the way they are moving in the sky can be very valuable in predicting daily weather changes. Checking the barometer movement first and a little local knowledge will ensure farmers are not taken by surprise by any sudden weather change during the day. Farmers with a basic knowledge of the clouds, the local weather influences and a reasonable barometer need never be taken by complete surprise by weather changes as the day unfolds. producing the white and grey colours of a cloud or fog. All clouds are white but some seem dark and even black due to their thickness and shading from the sun by other clouds. Clouds tend to develop differently at different levels of the atmosphere. This fact means it is possible not only to categorise them but to use them in weather prediction (see Figure 1). Changing weather Cloud formation Clouds form as water vapour in the air is evaporated upward. As this moist air rises it cools and expands until it reaches the temperature where condensation or dew point occurs. When the water vapour starts to condense, tiny droplets appear in the air 42 Farming Ahead July 2008 No. 198 www.farmingahead.com.au No cloud stays the same for more than a few minutes. One type or shape can give way to another quite rapidly and there often will be many transitional types and shapes in the sky all at the same time. Cloud types which can signal a change in the weather are high cirrus, middle level, low and vertically growing clouds. Climate and sustainability: weather predictions High cirrus clouds Vertically growing clouds Tornado Photos: Geelong Weather Services and Clyve Herbert If an air mass is saturated at a high altitude, white and thin cirrus clouds will form, composed of tiny ice crystals blown by the wind. These can be feathery shapes or even the very picturesque ‘mackerel sky’. If the cirrus becomes extensive or appears as cirrostratus — long layers of cirrus — or is moving from a westerly direction, it can indicate the approach of a frontal system, usually within 24 hours. Those tiny ice crystals will have been blown to higher levels from rainfall and storm clouds sometimes hundreds of kilometres to the west or south-west. Cirrus clouds Cumulus mediocris clouds Mammatus or bulging pouch clouds As long as this high cloud remains overhead the weather will stay dry. If a front is coming, the cloud pattern will change and usually become lower in the sky. Middle-level clouds There is a lot of variation in middle-level — mostly altostratus and altocumulus — clouds. The altostratus cloud appears as a sheet of grey or blue–grey, sometimes thickening in blobs and creating areas of light rainfall. The altocumulus cloud often arrives before a cold front. Do not be put off by the cotton puff or wavy appearance of altocumulus cloud; light rainfall is possible from this set-up because the atmosphere is becoming more unstable. In other words, the rounded nature of the clouds shows that the whole atmosphere is becoming turbulent — an important sign of likely rainfall. Altocumulus clouds Altocumulus castellanus clouds An indication that rainfall or thunderstorms are developing is if altocumulus clouds start to develop castle turret-like growths on top. As the temperature warms, especially if accompanied by falling barometric pressure, there is a high chance of rainfall later in the day. All middle level clouds are important to watch because the direction from which they are being blown will tell if there could be a front behind them. Usually in non-tropical Australia this will be somewhere between north-west and south-west. The surface wind can be quite different but the oncoming front will change all that. Low clouds Stratus, stratocumulus and nimbostratus are all forms of low clouds. If the middle-level clouds start to become thicker and lower, they often are transformed into nimbostratus, creating a dark and overcast sky and potentially generating moderate rainfalls. Stratocumulus clouds Nimbostratus clouds Sometimes a low stratus cloud has almost the same appearance as a nimbostratus but it does not produce any rainfall at all, or maybe just a light drizzle. Stratocumulus, one of the most common forms of cloud, can often form under a temperature inversion, where they are trapped because the air is warmer at a higher level. But mostly they are disappointing as rain-bringers unless they manage to grow vertically during the day. Contact Lindsay Smail is director of Geelong Weather Services. (03) 5241 5332 [email protected] www.geelongweatherservices.com Cumulonimbus clouds Cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds form when condensation occurs in bubble-like parcels of air, or thermals, hence their rounded shape. But they are flat-bottomed because this is where the dew point is reached. Soft-looking small clumps are called cumulus humilis and these can grow into a line of cumulus mediocris, which can often occur along a cold front. Up until this point there is nothing to suggest the weather will deteriorate too radically. But if there is a deep layer of unstable air the cloud will continue to grow upward with turrets or cauliflower tops. The growing cumulus congestus clouds are now becoming potential storm clouds with thunder and lightning and can be up to several kilometres high. When the humidity is high and powerful updrafts continue to increase the vertical development, eventually the gigantic cumulonimbus is produced. These can be recognised by the flat, black base which, in a severe storm, could be lowering further, or by a large anvil on top which spreads outward as it reaches higher levels of the atmosphere where temperatures start to increase. This whitish anvil is composed of ice crystals that extend in the direction the wind is blowing. When watching a cumulonimbus cell or multicell develop from a distance, a thick rain curtain with lightning bolts interspersed can be seen. There is often a deflation at the front and regeneration at the back of the storm; this indicates immense instability and ferocious up and downdraft, which could result in violent wind and lashing rain squalls on the ground. People underneath the cloud can see an eerie green colour that warns of hail. A mammatus structure sometimes occurs underneath the anvil. This situation also has the potential to cause heavy rainfall and wild squalls despite its beautiful, peaceful appearance. If the structure starts to rotate, it can develop a funnel, a waterspout or even a tornado, the most disastrous of all storms. Farming Ahead July 2008 No. 198 www.farmingahead.com.au 43