David DuBois

New Mexico State Climatologist
Associate Professor, New Mexico State University

Dr. DuBois is the State Climatologist for New Mexico and located in Las Cruces. As State Climatologist, Dr. DuBois focuses on climate literacy through providing climate information and education to the public, speaking engagements, interviews, school demonstrations, social networking, and tours. He is also the New Mexico Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow (CoCoRaHS) state coordinator.  Dr. DuBois chairs the NM Drought Monitoring Workgroup for the NM Governor’s Drought Task Force. This group meets once a month to discuss current status of the drought and communicate this to the Governor’s staff and to the public. As the State Climatologist, he directs the New Mexico Climate Center. The Center employs students and a technician to operate and maintain an archive of meteorological data collected throughout the state of New Mexico. The Center oversees a network of automated surface weather stations throughout the state with most of these located at university agricultural science centers. 

Through his faculty appointment at the Plant and Environmental Sciences Department at New Mexico State University, Dr. DuBois maintains an active research program in air quality and applied climatology, participating in studies to quantify the interactions of climate and pollution, the origins, composition, and transport of dust and other pollutants.  Much of his work focuses on issues along the US/Mexico border and part of the Joint Advisory Committee of the Improvement of Air Quality in the Paso del Norte airshed. Dr. DuBois also collaborates closely with the Center for Applied Remote Sensing in Agriculture, Meteorology and Environment at NMSU.  Other duties of Dr. DuBois at the university include teaching and student mentoring.

Publications

Dunbar, N., et al. Climate Change in New Mexico Over the Next 50 Years: Impacts on Water Resources. New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, 2022.
DuBois, D. Dust Mitigation Monitoring Project, Final Report. New Mexico State University, Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, 2022.
Dormody, Thomas J., et al. Lesson Worksheets: A Tool for Developing Youth Weather and Climate Science Comprehension. Journal of Extension, 2020.
Weiss, J., et al. El Niño 2018—2019? An Overview of What It Might Mean for New Mexico. University of Arizona, 2018.
Rodopoulou, S., et al. Air Pollution and Hospital Emergency Room and Admissions for Cardiovascular and Respiratory Diseases in Dona Ana County, New Mexico. 2014, pp. 39-46, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2013.12.006.