Bibliographie complète
Observed Trends in Canada’s Climate and Influence of Low-Frequency Variability Modes
Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Vincent, Lucie A. (Auteur)
- Zhang, Xuebin (Auteur)
- Brown, Ross (Auteur)
- Feng, Yang (Auteur)
- Mekis, Eva (Auteur)
- Milewska, Ewa J. (Auteur)
- Wan, Hui (Auteur)
- Wang, Xiaolan L. (Auteur)
Titre
Observed Trends in Canada’s Climate and Influence of Low-Frequency Variability Modes
Résumé
AbstractTrends in Canada’s climate are analyzed using recently updated data to provide a comprehensive view of climate variability and long-term changes over the period of instrumental record. Trends in surface air temperature, precipitation, snow cover, and streamflow indices are examined along with the potential impact of low-frequency variability related to large-scale atmospheric and oceanic oscillations on these trends. The results show that temperature has increased significantly in most regions of Canada over the period 1948–2012, with the largest warming occurring in winter and spring. Precipitation has also increased, especially in the north. Changes in other climate and hydroclimatic variables, including a decrease in the amount of precipitation falling as snow in the south, fewer days with snow cover, an earlier start of the spring high-flow season, and an increase in April streamflow, are consistent with the observed warming and precipitation trends. For the period 1900–2012, there are suffici...
Publication
Journal of Climate
Volume
28
Numéro
11
Date
2015-05-27
Extra
DOI: 10.1175/jcli-d-14-00697.1
MAG ID: 2028185690
Référence
Vincent, L. A., Zhang, X., Brown, R., Feng, Y., Mekis, E., Milewska, E. J., Wan, H., & Wang, X. L. (2015). Observed Trends in Canada’s Climate and Influence of Low-Frequency Variability Modes. Journal of Climate, 28(11). https://doi.org/10.1175/jcli-d-14-00697.1
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