A spatio-temporal index for heat vulnerability assessment

被引:0
|
作者
Suzanne E. Kershaw
Andrew A. Millward
机构
[1] Ryerson University,Department of Geography
来源
关键词
Heat exposure; Urban heat island; Humidex; Spatial interpolation; Toronto;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The public health consequences of extreme heat events are felt most intensely in metropolitan areas where population density is high and the presence of the urban heat island phenomenon exacerbates the potential for prolonged exposure. This research develops an approach to map potential heat stress on humans by combining temperature and relative humidity into an index of apparent temperature. We use ordinary kriging to generate hourly prediction maps describing apparent temperature across the Greater Toronto Area, Canada. Meteorological data were obtained from 65 locations for 6 days in 2008 when extreme heat alerts were issued for the City of Toronto. Apparent temperature and exposure duration were integrated in a single metric, humidex degree hours (HDH), and mapped. The results show a significant difference in apparent temperature between built and natural locations from 3 pm to 7 am; this discrepancy was greatest at 12 am where built locations had a mean of 2.8 index values larger, t(71) = 5.379, p < 0.001. Spatial trends in exposure to heat stress (apparent temperature, ≥30°C) show the downtown core of the City of Toronto and much of Mississauga (west of Toronto) as likely to experience hazardous levels of prolonged heat and humidity (HDH ≥ 72) during a heat alert. We recommend that public health officials use apparent temperature and exposure duration to develop spatially explicit heat vulnerability assessment tools; HDH is one approach that unites these risk factors into a single metric.
引用
收藏
页码:7329 / 7342
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Spatio-temporal analysis of the extent of an extreme heat event
    Ana C. Cebrián
    Jesús Asín
    Alan E. Gelfand
    Erin M. Schliep
    Jorge Castillo-Mateo
    María A. Beamonte
    Jesús Abaurrea
    Stochastic Environmental Research and Risk Assessment, 2022, 36 : 2737 - 2751
  • [32] Spatio-temporal dynamics of water and heat in a field soil
    Mohanty, BP
    Shouse, PJ
    van Genuchten, MT
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 1998, 47 (1-2): : 133 - 143
  • [33] WILDFIRE VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT IN WESTERN SICHUAN CHINA BASED ON MULTI-SOURCE SPATIO-TEMPORAL DATA
    Zhao, Donglin
    2022 IEEE INTERNATIONAL GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING SYMPOSIUM (IGARSS 2022), 2022, : 7930 - 7933
  • [34] Spatio-temporal analysis of the extent of an extreme heat event
    Cebrian, Ana C.
    Asin, Jesus
    Gelfand, Alan E.
    Schliep, Erin M.
    Castillo-Mateo, Jorge
    Beamonte, Maria A.
    Abaurrea, Jesus
    STOCHASTIC ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND RISK ASSESSMENT, 2022, 36 (09) : 2737 - 2751
  • [35] Spatio-Temporal Pattern and Vulnerability Assessment of the Human Settlements along the Beibu Gulf Coast of Guangxi, China
    Chen, Huirong
    Yang, Jianzhong
    Wang, Jinliang
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2024, 16 (06)
  • [36] Spatio-temporal variation in desert vulnerability using desertification index over the Banas River Basin in Rajasthan, India
    Kalyan S.
    Sharma D.
    Sharma A.
    Arabian Journal of Geosciences, 2021, 14 (1)
  • [37] Modeling Spatio-Temporal Divergence in Land Vulnerability to Desertification with Local Regressions
    Imbrenda, Vito
    Coluzzi, Rosa
    Di Stefano, Valerio
    Egidi, Gianluca
    Salvati, Luca
    Samela, Caterina
    Simoniello, Tiziana
    Lanfredi, Maria
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (17)
  • [38] Erosional vulnerability and spatio-temporal variability of the Barak River, NE India
    Laskar, Anwarul Alam
    Phukon, Parag
    CURRENT SCIENCE, 2012, 103 (01): : 80 - 86
  • [39] Spatio-temporal reasoning based spatio-temporal information management middleware
    Wang, SS
    Liu, DY
    Wang, Z
    ADVANCED WEB TECHNOLOGIES AND APPLICATIONS, 2004, 3007 : 436 - 441
  • [40] Assessment of spatio-temporal parameters during unconstrained walking
    Wiebren Zijlstra
    European Journal of Applied Physiology, 2004, 92 : 39 - 44