Abstract

Snow is important for many physical, social, and economic sectors in North America. In a warming climate, the characteristics of snow will likely change in fundamental ways, therefore compelling societal need for future projections of snow. However, many stakeholders require climate change information at finer resolutions that global climate models (GCMs) can provide. The North American Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment (NA-CORDEX) provides an ensemble of regional climate model (RCMs) simulations at two resolutions (~ 0.5° and ~ 0.25°) designed to help serve the climate impacts and adaptation communities. This is the first study to examine the differences in end of twenty-first-century projections of snow from the NA-CORDEX RCMs and their driving GCMs. We find that the broad patterns of change are similar across RCMs and GCMs: snow cover retreats, snow mass decreases everywhere except at high latitudes, and the duration of the snow covered season decreases. Regionally, the spatial details, magnitude, percent, and uncertainty of future changes vary between the GCM and RCM ensemble but are similar between the two resolutions of the RCM ensembles. An increase in winter snow amounts at high latitudes is a robust response across all ensembles. Percent snow losses are found to be more substantial in the GCMs than the RCMs over most of North America, especially in regions with high-elevation topography. Specifically, percent snow losses decrease with increasing elevation as the model resolution becomes finer.

Highlights

  • Terrestrial snow plays a key role in the climate, ecology, hydrology, and economies ofNorth America (NA)

  • We find the broad patterns of change are similar across RCMs and global climate models (GCMs): snow cover retreats, snow mass decreases everywhere except at high latitudes, and the duration of the snow covered season decreases

  • Since NA-CORDEX provides downscaled simulations at two resolutions, we focus on the differences between the RCM and GCM ensembles to identify what, if any, additional information is gained by increasing resolution from GCM scales down to 0.5o and 0.25o

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Summary

Introduction

Terrestrial snow plays a key role in the climate, ecology, hydrology, and economies ofNorth America (NA). Snow’s high albedo alters the surface energy budget influencing both long-term climate and short-term weather It provides an important habitat for wildlife that are adapted to living in snow conditions (Campbell et al, 2005; Barsugli et al, 2020). Seasonal snow accumulation is a natural reservoir for water storage and the timing and amount of snowmelt is critical for water supply (Barnett et al, 2005), agriculture (Qin et al, 2020) and hydropower production The timing and amount of snowmelt is linked to droughts (Harpold, 2016) and wildfires (Westerling et al, 2006). Snow is crucial for winter transportation (Palko and Lemmen, 2018) and tourism

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