Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network
{{Short description|International citizen science project}}
File:Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network logo.svg
The Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network, or CoCoRaHS, is a network of volunteer weather observers in the United States, Canada, and the Bahamas that take daily readings of precipitation and report them to a central data store over the Internet. The program is an example of citizen science.
History
In 1997, the network was started in Larimer County, Colorado, after a flash flood in Spring Creek killed five people{{cite news|last1=Browning|first1=Tom|title=Lessons from a killer flood|url=http://www.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_4104577|accessdate=2015-03-27|work=The Denver Post|date=2006-07-30}} and damaged structures in the city of Fort Collins, Colorado, including hundreds of millions of US dollars in damage to the Colorado State University campus.{{cite web |url=http://www.ci.fort-collins.co.us/oem/historical-flooding.php |title=Flooding Timeline in Fort Collins |publisher= Office of Emergency Management
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927222903/http://www.ci.fort-collins.co.us/oem/historical-flooding.php |archivedate=2007-09-27}}
The severity of the flood and its widespread spatial variability surprised meteorologists, and Nolan Doesken, a former assistant state climatologist for the state of Colorado, asked for precipitation measurements from private citizens in the area. About 300 responded to his emergency request for data. Said Doesken later: {{quote|"The results of the data showed that more than 14 in. (36 cm) of rain fell over southwest Fort Collins, the area where the flood waters originated, while less than 2 in. (5 cm) of rain fell only 3–4 mi (5–6 km) east. The enthusiastic interest shown by volunteers and the great value of the data verified the need for such a service, and CoCoRaHS was born."{{cite web|url=http://www.awwa.org/communications/mainstream/2004/Jul20/Lead02raingaugevolunteers.cfm |title=raingaugevolunteers |website=www.awwa.org }} {{dead link|date=January 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}}}
Expansion to other U.S. States/territories and other countries
The program was originally confined to Colorado (the first "Co" in "CoCoRaHS" stood for "Colorado" instead of "Community"), but began expanding to other states, first expanding to Wyoming in 2003, with the last expansion into Nebraska in March 2013.{{Cite web |title=Order of States Joining the CoCoRaHS Network |url=https://media.cocorahs.org/docs/StateAdmissiontotheCoCorahsUnion2023.pdf }}
class="wikitable"
|+Order of U.S. States Joining the CoCoRaHS Network !Order of addition to network !State/District (in descending order from first included to last included) !Time when CoCoRaHS expanded to specified state/district |
1
|1998 |
2
|2003 |
3
|2004 |
4
|March 2005 |
5
|April 2005 |
6
|October 2005 |
7
|October 2005 |
8
|October 2005 |
9
|October 2005 |
10
|December 2005 |
11
|March 2006 |
12
|June 2006 |
13
|December 2006 |
14
|December 2006 |
15
|December 2006 |
16
|March 2007 |
17
|March 2007 |
18
|April 2007 |
19
|June 2007 |
20
|Iowa |August 2007 |
21
|September 2007 |
22
|September 2007 |
23
|October 2007 |
24
|November 2007 |
25
|November 2007 |
26
|Late 2007, Early 2008 |
27
|January 2008 |
28
|February 2008 |
29
|March 2008 |
30
|April 2008 |
31
|May 2008 |
32
|June 2008 |
33
|Utah |July 2008 |
34
|July 2008 |
35
|August 2008 |
36
|October 2008 |
37
|November 2008 |
38
|January 2009 |
39
|Ohio |February 2009 |
40
|March 2009 |
41
|April 2009 |
42
|April 2009 |
43
|May 2009 |
44
|June 2009 |
45
|July 2009 |
46
|July 2009 |
47
|August 2009 |
48
|September 2009 |
49
|September 2009 |
50
|December 2009 |
51
|March 2013 |
class="wikitable"
|+Order of countries and territories joining the CoCoRaHS Network !Order of addition to network !Country/Territory (in descending order from first included to last included) !Time of which CoCoRaHS expanded to specified country/territory |
1
|December 2012 |
2
|June 2013 |
3
|February 2015 |
4
|June 2016 |
5
|Guam |October 2022 |
Users
CoCoRaHS is used by a wide variety of organizations and individuals. The National Weather Service (NWS), other meteorologists, hydrologists, emergency managers, city utilities (water supply, water conservation, storm water), transportation departments, insurance adjusters, the USDA, engineers, mosquito control, ranchers and farmers, outdoor and recreation interests, teachers, students, and neighbors in the community are examples of people who use CoCoRaHS data.{{cite web |url = https://ccsinventory.wilsoncenter.org/#projectId/81 |title = The Community Collaborative Rain, Hail, and Snow Network (CoCoRaHS) |date = |website = Federal Crowdsourcing and Citizen Science Catalog |publisher = CitizenScience.gov |access-date = 2018-07-08 |archive-date = 2018-07-09 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180709065026/https://ccsinventory.wilsoncenter.org/#projectId/81 |url-status = dead }}
=Other programs=
In or around 2000, the National Weather Service Lincoln, Illinois independently began a similar program, the Significant Weather Observing Program (SWOP). CoCoRaHS data supplements the more rigorous data from the national program with increased spatial and temporal resolution. Real-time data is also provided by the Citizen Weather Observer Program (CWOP), whose users operate weather stations that automatically report over the Internet, and which supplements the more rigorous data reported by formal surface weather observation stations. The earliest and thus critically important for its long-term historical record from respective locations is the Cooperative Observer program of manually recorded daily summaries.{{fact|date=April 2024}}
Sponsors
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) are major sponsors of CoCoRaHS and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is also a partner. Other organizations have contributed either financially or with supplies and equipment. Many other organizations and individuals have also pitched in time and resources to help keep the network up and running.{{fact|date=April 2024}}
Forms
Gregory Syroney with the Scioto County Storm Chaser Center,{{Cite web|title=Scioto County Storm Chaser Center - Gregory Syroney, President and Storm Chaser|url=http://stormchasercenter.net/GSyroney.aspx#CoCoRaHS-Form|website=Scioto County Storm Chaser Center - Gregory Syroney, President and Storm Chaser|language=}} in Portsmouth, Ohio created the Significant Weather Report Form PDF File for CoCoRaHS Headquarters in Fort Collins.
Status
As of 2015, all fifty states, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico participate in CoCoRaHS.{{cite web|title=Welcome to CoCoRaHS!|url=http://www.cocorahs.org/|publisher=CoCoRaHS|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150310095655/http://www.cocorahs.org/|archivedate=2015-03-10}}
=Canada=
In December 2011, the CoCoRaHS Canada network began in Manitoba following a massive flood in that province.{{cite web|title=About CoCoRaHS Canada|url=http://www.cocorahs.org/Content.aspx?page=about-cocorahs-canada|publisher=CoCoRaHS|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140701135921/http://www.cocorahs.org/Content.aspx?page=about-cocorahs-canada|archivedate=2014-07-01}}
As of 2014, the network had expanded to the Canadian provinces of Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, and Saskatchewan, with over 20,000 participants as of March 2015.
See also
References
{{reflist|1}}
Bibliography
- {{CC-notice|cc=by3|url=http://www.cocorahs.org/Content.aspx?page=aboutus}}
External links
{{commonscat}}
- [https://www.cocorahs.org/ CoCoRaHS website] and [http://cocorahs.blogspot.com/ blog]
- [https://twitter.com/cocorahs/ Twitter profile]
- [https://www.facebook.com/CoCoRaHS Facebook page]
- [http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/coop/ NOAA Cooperative Weather Observer Program]