California Tule Fog Becoming Increasingly Rare (Photo) At first glance this image might seem to show Central California covered in snow. But that white stuff isn't the makings of a winter wonderland. It's thick dense fog known as tule fog. Tule fog season in California is traditionally between November and March when rains bring moisture to the state's Central Valley. The term tule comes from the plant of the same name (Schoenoplectus acutus) which dominates marshes in the region. But tule fog may not be the defining feature of Central Valley winters for much longer. A new study published May 16 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters found that the number of winter fog events declined by 46 percent over the past 32 winters. [Fish Rain & Fire Whirlwinds: The World's Weirdest Weather] Vanishing fog The conditions varied year by year depending on the level of moisture study leader Dennis Baldocchi a biometeorologist at the University of California Berkeley said in a statement. Generally when conditions are too dry or too wet we get less fog Baldocchi said. If we're in a drought there isn't enough moisture to condense in the air. During wet years we need the rain to stop so that the fog can form. This image of tule fog was taken Jan. 17 2011 by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer on NASA's Terra satellite according to NASA's Earth Observatory which released the image on June 5. Fog and fruit The decline of tule fog has pros and cons. Dense fog frequently causes traffic accidents in the Central Valley some on a very large scale. In 2007 for example dense fog on California's Highway 99 near Fresno caused an 108-car pileup that killed two people. Fewer days of fog means less risk of deadly accidents. But tule fog is also crucial to the Central Valley's fruit and nut crop which represent about 95 percent of U.S. production of foods such as cherries almonds peaches and apricots according to UC Berkeley. Fruit and nut trees need a winter chill period to become dormant and tule fog helps contribute to that chill. As fogs decline so have winter chills Baldocchi and his colleagues reported. The number of winter days with temperatures between 32 degrees and 45 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees to 7 degrees Celsius) in the Central Valley have dropped by several hundred in the past 60 years. For fruit trees the fog and temperatures are related Baldocchi said. A shroud of fog shields the trees from sunlight keeping their buds cooler. As a result farmers may need to cultivate more heat-hardy trees or move orchards to cooler spots. California's current drought is unlikely to help matters as it is starving the state of the moisture needed to form tule fog. California's final full snowpack survey of the winter on May 1 found that the moisture stored in the state's snow is at 18 percent of normal. A more limited automated survey conducted on May 30 suggests that snowpack was at only 3 percent of normal on that date. As of May 30 most of California's major reservoirs were at 50 percent capacity or lower according to the state's weekly drought report. There have been 1852 wildfires in the state since Jan. 1 exceeding the year-to-date average of 1074. Editor's Note: If you have an amazing weather or general science photo you'd like to share for a possible story or image gallery please contact managing editor Jeanna Bryner at  LSphotos@livescience.com. Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.