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Climate Webinar - Shared screen with speaker view
Karen Bearden
41:00
yes
Jennifer Harrison
41:00
I have
David Henry
41:04
no
Tracy Heenan
41:04
no
Mike Hansen
41:04
no
Katherine Schirmer
41:05
no
Richard Mullinax
41:05
Sorry, no.
Karen Lauterbach
41:06
Yes
Amanda Terry
41:08
no
kenneth Vanhoy
41:08
no
Margaret Cloud
41:09
yes
Jamey Lowdermilk
41:09
Yes
Jacob Van Kretschmar
41:09
yes
DIane Ursano
41:09
no
Patricia Korpik
41:09
yes
Randy Dodd
41:10
Yes!
Linda Sims
41:10
yes
Gigi Dillon
41:10
no
William Guess
41:11
yes
Tandy Jones
41:11
yes
Calvin Pleasants
41:12
no
daphne traywick
41:12
nope
Larry Petrovick
41:12
yes
Grace Penny
41:12
The yes
Lynda Turbeville
41:13
Yes
Marilyn Flannigan
41:14
no
Elaina Kenyon
41:15
no
Marty Schweitzer
41:16
no
Bob Dennis
41:16
Definitely
Annie Hanson
41:16
no
Kate Gavaghan
41:16
yes
Tom
41:17
no
Charles Cooper
41:18
no
gov wallace
41:19
no
Allison Blanks
41:20
yes
James Crawford
41:22
No
Matthew Milling
41:24
Nope:)
Steve Moore
41:24
yes
Cathy Jones
41:32
yes
Cathy Jones
41:37
yes
Nita Dukes
55:10
When you measure soil moisture, how deep are you going?
David Henry
55:25
Who owns the other monitoring stations. You have 44. Many more than 44 on the map.
Kate Gavaghan
55:30
Awesome data! Do many of our larger growers utilize the NCSCO resources?
Jamey Lowdermilk
56:22
What is this graph called?
Jamey Lowdermilk
56:47
*type of graph
Jamey Lowdermilk
57:10
Thanks!
Kate Gavaghan
59:26
yes
Tandy Jones
59:34
yes
Allison Blanks
59:34
yes
Lynda Turbeville
59:35
Yes
David Henry
59:35
yes
Katherine Schirmer
59:36
yes
Mike Hansen
59:36
yes
Karen Lauterbach
59:39
Yes
Margaret Cloud
59:39
Yes - familiar
Randy Dodd
59:40
yes
Larry Petrovick
59:40
yes
Tom Metzguer
59:41
yes
Charles Cooper
59:45
could useoverview
Grace Penny
59:52
familiar
Amanda Terry
59:57
some what
DIane Ursano
01:00:25
yes...but want to know more
Linda Sims
01:06:56
I like maps and graphs, too. Pictures can tell a good story.
Tracy Heenan
01:08:24
Does Jordan lake moderate temps in Chatham County?
Debbie Roos
01:08:45
WRAL reported this is the fourth driest April on record for the RDU airport
Tracy Heenan
01:09:05
I believe that. First year I've had to water in April
Luelle
01:10:53
so 9inches
Jamey Lowdermilk
01:18:17
Makes sense, thanks.
Charles Cooper
01:21:46
With the temperature predictions, are they ever being "re-normed" for clear climate change over the last ten or so years? What is "Normal"?
Kate Gavaghan
01:23:40
Over the next few decades, which crops in NC are at greatest risk due to warming temps (especially at night) and higher precipitation?
Carl King
01:24:12
If "normal" is the average of the most recent 3 decades, how can we learn what was considered normal in earlier decades / years? i.e., what was normal in 1970 and how different is now from then?
steve woolford
01:29:24
what do these changes mean in terms of how severe warming looks now and in the near future
DIane Ursano
01:32:59
Are there graphs of mean temps (or did I miss it?)
DIane Ursano
01:35:10
Are there measurements available for subsurface aquafers and changes. The intense storms add inches of water but much of it runs off.
Carl King
01:48:55
how many nights over 75 do we have on average now? did I miss that number?
Luelle
01:52:07
is anyone studying the tends of the micro changes on the environment? Like - how are those 12 days affecting seeds that need the freeze?
Kate Gavaghan
01:54:51
How do you equalize across types of precipitation? For example, is higher number of days in mountains partly due to snow versus rain?
Richard Mullinax
01:55:35
With more precipitation predicted over time will that be more periodic high water events so it could include periods of localized dry spells that could be a disrupter of crops?
Luelle
01:56:49
sounds like the swings between drought and extreme precipitation are less temperate
Luelle
01:57:02
or maybe I mean drastic
Luelle
01:57:27
or do we have data that shows this
Luelle
02:00:46
is anyone studying how those drastic swings affect naute over time?
Luelle
02:01:00
nature - not naute
Marilyn Flannigan
02:02:29
I can attest to the fact that high tide flooding is increasing. I had a place at Carolina Beach from 2010 to 2020. I sold primarily because every high tide, the street in front of my house flooded - higher and higher every year.
Carl King
02:05:11
will you share your slides by email after webinar? this has been great!
Tomasita Jacubowitz
02:06:02
awesome presentation
Luelle
02:06:27
gotta love data without politics! thank yo u!
Linda Sims
02:07:09
Thanks for this helpful information and resource links.
Luelle
02:08:52
is that wide swing that is becoming problematic no? no more coasting . . .
James Crawford
02:09:05
Bees & other pollinators - seems that this will be a vital piece to study - the impact of weather changes in the Piedmont on effectiveness or ineffectiveness of pollinators.
Jamey Lowdermilk
02:09:16
Great presentation, thanks so much.
Luelle
02:10:30
any tips for beekeepers
Steve Moore
02:11:05
Great webinar, Debbie and Rebecca
Tomasita Jacubowitz
02:11:38
I am now growing fruiting olives in Guilford County. This is nuts!
Luelle
02:11:39
we can't stop this... we have to adapt
Bob Dennis
02:11:42
Do you collaborate with neighboring state climatologists? If so, do numbers agree?
kenneth Vanhoy
02:12:51
We know what is causing it so we can stop this if we had the will.
Luelle
02:13:27
you can't stop cosmis climate change ... we can only do something about planetary changes
Luelle
02:13:32
cosmic
kenneth Vanhoy
02:15:21
What Cosmic changes? we are the problem
Luelle
02:17:19
climate has changed over time for ions.... there is a distinction to be made . . not sure if that is being looked at scientifically and presented to the masses
Kate Gavaghan
02:19:55
A flurry of policy coming out at the national and int’l level right now. At the state level, EO 80 and the actions of NCORR working to incorporate this data. NCGA this year getting on board in a fairly dramatic way (given past 10 years).
kenneth Vanhoy
02:20:05
Yea but this time we are the problem. We have changed the inputs. Not outside forces.
Luelle
02:20:41
there is no causation demonstrated... only correlation
Luelle
02:21:20
not possible to demonstrate causation because no technology existed to measure climate change over the millenia
Kate Gavaghan
02:22:05
Ice core sampling very clearly demonstrates concentrations of CO2 in atmosphere. If you can count, you can see causation.
Luelle
02:22:31
that is but one data . . . sure
Allison Blanks
02:23:20
are there tools coming online that you are really excited about ? (i.e. more computing power / innovations to help with model development, etc.?)
kenneth Vanhoy
02:23:33
Keep doing the same thing and we will get more of a change as presented in the webinar. We have changed the carbon cycle.
Luelle
02:24:00
agreed... the ozone has repaired ...
Tandy Jones
02:24:13
fire ant range
Cathy Jones
02:24:15
Colorado potato beetles!
Tracy Heenan
02:25:08
Thank you so much, Debbie and Rebecca. Wonderful presentation.
Carl King
02:26:21
thank you, Rebecca and Debbie!
Mike Hansen
02:26:25
Thank you very informative!
Richard Mullinax
02:26:30
Thank you.
Carol Carter
02:26:39
Thank you both! Great information!
Tandy Jones
02:26:50
thank you both!
Larry Petrovick
02:26:59
Thank you Debbie and Rebecca. This was excellent!
Bob Dennis
02:27:09
Nicely done...Thank you!!
Marilyn Flannigan
02:27:12
Thank you!
Jacob Van Kretschmar
02:27:19
Thank you Rebecca and Debbie!
Allison Blanks
02:27:20
great job,thank you! 😊
John Roach
02:27:28
Thank you
Rachael Barker
02:27:28
Thank you!
Kaylea Noce
02:27:39
Thank you!
Tomasita Jacubowitz
02:27:48
thanks
DIane Ursano
02:27:50
Thank you all
Nita Dukes
02:28:10
Thank you