Friday, April 17, 2015
YOLO COUNTY NEWS
99 CENTS

As Central Valley fog disappears, fruit, nut crops decline

tule fog1W

Tule fog — essential to some crops — drifts through a walnut orchard near Meridian in Kern County. Anthony Dunn/San Francisco Chronicle photo

By Peter Fimrite
The soupy, thick tule fog that regularly blanketed the Central Valley and terrorized unsuspecting motorists during the winter has been slowly disappearing over the past three decades, a UC Berkeley study has found.

The blinding mists may not be missed by those who remember white-knuckle drives in zero visibility and regular multiple-car pileups, but the fog dearth is bad news for farmers, according to a study published this month in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

“It is jeopardizing fruit growing in California,” said Dennis Baldocchi, a biometeorologist at UC Berkeley and lead author of the study. “We’re getting much lower yields.”

Baldocchi and co-author Eric Waller, a UC Berkeley doctoral student, used weather station data and compared it with satellite records and photographs kept by NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration during the past 32 winters.

The satellite evidence was clear. During fog days, he said “it’s just all white, like a big bathtub full of cream.”

The number of days when the valley was socked-in varied widely from year to year, he said, but the average amount of tule fog between November and the end of February declined 46 percent during the study period.

In 1980, for instance, there was an average of 37 foggy days in Fresno compared with 22 now. Long-term averages were used in an attempt to correct for times of drought. Only two foggy days were recorded this past winter.

Tule fog, named after the tule grass wetlands that covered much of the Central Valley, is a dense ground fog that usually forms during calm winds and cold temperatures after the first significant rainfall of the season.

Held down by warmer air from the surrounding mountains, the fog can linger for days or even weeks and cover as much as 400 miles from Bakersfield to Red Bluff.

Limited visibility
The milky blanket is often so dense that people can barely see 5 feet in front of them. This is why tule fog has been the leading cause of weather-related casualties in California.

Chain-reaction crashes caused by a lack of visibility have occurred on many roads and freeways, including a 25-car pileup that killed five people on Interstate 5 near Elk Grove in 1997. Two people were killed and there were multiple injuries in 2007 when 108 cars, including 18 big-rig trucks, crashed into each other on Highway 99 between Fowler and Fresno.

Baldocchi said a combination of factors may be contributing to the tule retreat, including global warming and, possibly, a decrease in crop burning. He said records indicate the amount of fog increased in the Central Valley from the 1930s through the 1970s, and then decreased starting about the same time farmers cut down on winter burning. Smoke in the sky can help produce fog as the air cools, he said.

Whatever it is, he said, “it is happening before our eyes. The trends are very distinct.”

The decline is obvious to anyone who remembers how it once was.

“I grew up in the valley, and when I was a kid we had these terrible foggy winters, and I go out there now and there is hardly any fog at all,” said Baldocchi, whose father grew almonds and walnuts.

Rely on thick fog
The problem is that almonds, pistachios, cherries, apricots and peaches rely on the thick ground fog to hold down temperatures and bring on a dormant period, a necessary physiological process that helps them produce buds, flowers and fruit during the growing season.

“If we don’t get enough chill, the flowers and fruit doesn’t form,” said Baldocchi, a professor of environmental science, policy and management. “An insufficient rest period impairs the ability of farmers to achieve high-quality fruit yields.”

That’s trouble for the state’s multibillion-dollar agricultural industry and could have ramifications across the country. California produces 95 percent of U.S. fruit and nut crops, which are suffering already from three years of drought.

Unlikely to improve
And things aren’t expected to get better. Climate forecasters predict steadily warming winters in the Central Valley. Baldocchi said temperatures have increased 3 to 4 degrees Fahrenheit in places like Chico, Davis and the foothills since the 1940s. Various other studies have shown dramatic declines since 1950 in the number of hours temperatures in the Central Valley have been below 40 degrees, according to the report.

“Farmers may also need to consider adjusting the location of orchards to follow the fog, so to speak,” Baldocchi said. “Some regions along the foothills of the Sierra are candidates, for instance. That type of change is a slow and difficult process, so we need to start thinking about this now.”

— Reach Peter Fimrite at [email protected]

Comments

comments

San Francisco Chronicle

  • Recent Posts

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this newspaper and receive notifications of new articles by email.

  • .

    News

     
    UCD study: Crickets not enough to feed the world just yet

    By Kathy Keatley Garvey | From Page: A1

    It’ll be a perfect day for a picnic — and lots more

    By Tanya Perez | From Page: A1 | Gallery

     
    Turning a mess into olive oil success

    By Dave Jones | From Page: A1 | Gallery

    Enjoy a chemistry bang on Picnic Day

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A3

     
    Start your Picnic Day with pancakes

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A3

    Local students to perform at fundraising concert

    By Jeff Hudson | From Page: A3 | Gallery

     
    Doxie Derby crowns the winning wiener

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A3

    CA House hosts crepe breakfast

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A3

     
    Fundraiser benefits Ugandan women

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A3

    See pups at Picnic Day

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4 | Gallery

     
    Davis poet will read his work at library

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4

    Rotary Club hosts whisky tasting

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4

     
    Free blood pressure screenings offered

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4Comments are off for this post

    Ribs and Rotary benefits local charities

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4

     
    Dodd plans fundraising barbecue in Davis

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4

    Soroptimists set date for golf tourney

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4

     
    Socks collected for homeless veterans

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4

    Council will present environmental awards Tuesday

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A5

     
    Invention and upcycling to be honored at Square Tomatoes Fair

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A5

     
    Take a peek at Putah Creek on daylong tour

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A5 | Gallery

    Pence Gallery Garden Tour tickets on sale

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A5

     
    Davis authors featured at writing conference in Stockton

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A6

    Sign up soon for Davis history tour

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A6 | Gallery

     
    Campus firearms bill passes Senate committee

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A6

    Emerson featured at photography program

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A6

     
    Portuguese influence in Yolo County detailed

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A6

     
    UC Davis Circle K Club wins awards at district convention

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A6

    Concert and dance party celebrate KDRT’s 10 years on the air

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A7 | Gallery

     
    Survival skills to be taught at preserve

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A9

    .

    Forum

    Tom Meyer cartoon

    By Debbie Davis | From Page: A8

     
    It’s time to fight for California’s jobs

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A8

    Future leaders give back

    By Letters to the Editor | From Page: A8

     
    Know where your gift is going

    By Letters to the Editor | From Page: A8

    Pipeline veto a good move

    By Letters to the Editor | From Page: A8

     
    Artists offer heartfelt thanks

    By Letters to the Editor | From Page: A8

    .

    Sports

    Aggie women ready to host (win?) Big West golf tourney

    By Bruce Gallaudet | From Page: B1

     
    New strength coach hopes to stem UCD football injury tide

    By Bruce Gallaudet | From Page: B1 | Gallery

    Herd has too much for Devil softballers

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B1

     
    Les, AD Gould talk about the Aggie coach’s future

    By Bruce Gallaudet | From Page: B1

    DHS boys drop another Delta League match

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B1 | Gallery

     
    UCD roundup: Quintet of Aggie gymnasts honored for academics

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B2 | Gallery

     
    River Cats fall to Las Vegas

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B12

     
    Diamondbacks defeat Giants in 12 innings

    By The Associated Press | From Page: B12 | Gallery

    .

    Features

    DSF kicks off 10th anniversary celebration at the carousel

    By Anne Ternus-Bellamy | From Page: B5

     
    Many summer enrichment opportunities available for students

    By Anne Ternus-Bellamy | From Page: B5

     
    What’s happening

    By Anne Ternus-Bellamy | From Page: B5

    .

    Arts

    ‘True Story:’ In their dreams

    By Derrick Bang | From Page: A10 | Gallery

     
    ‘Once’ an unforgetable celebration of music, relationships

    By Bev Sykes | From Page: A11 | Gallery

     
    .

    Business

    Honda shows off new Civic at New York show

    By The Associated Press | From Page: B3

     
    .

    Obituaries

    Robert Leigh Cordrey

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4

     
    Ruth Rodenbeck Stumpf

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A4

    .

    Comics

    Comics: Friday, April 17, 2015

    By Creator | From Page: B10