Abstract
Abstract. It is well established that the Earth's climate system has warmed significantly over the past several decades, and in association there have been widespread changes in various other Earth system components. This has been especially prevalent in the cold regions of the northern mid- to high latitudes. Examples of these changes can be found within the western and northern interior of Canada, a region that exemplifies the scientific and societal issues faced in many other similar parts of the world, and where impacts have global-scale consequences. This region has been the geographic focus of a large amount of previous research on changing climatic, cryospheric, and hydrological regimes in recent decades, while current initiatives such as the Changing Cold Regions Network (CCRN) introduced in this review seek to further develop the understanding and diagnosis of this change and hence improve the capacity to predict future change. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the observed changes in various Earth system components and a concise and up-to-date regional picture of some of the temporal trends over the interior of western Canada since the mid- or late 20th century. The focus is on air temperature, precipitation, seasonal snow cover, mountain glaciers, permafrost, freshwater ice cover, and river discharge. Important long-term observational networks and data sets are described, and qualitative linkages among the changing components are highlighted. Increases in air temperature are the most notable changes within the domain, rising on average 2 °C throughout the western interior since 1950. This increase in air temperature is associated with hydrologically important changes to precipitation regimes and unambiguous declines in snow cover depth, persistence, and spatial extent. Consequences of warming air temperatures have caused mountain glaciers to recede at all latitudes, permafrost to thaw at its southern limit, and active layers over permafrost to thicken. Despite these changes, integrated effects on stream flow are complex and often offsetting. Following a review of the current literature, we provide insight from a network of northern research catchments and other sites detailing how climate change confounds hydrological responses at smaller scales, and we recommend several priority research areas that will be a focus of continued work in CCRN. Given the complex interactions and process responses to climate change, it is argued that further conceptual understanding and quantitative diagnosis of the mechanisms of change over a range of scales is required before projections of future change can be made with confidence.
Highlights
Recent warming of the Earth’s climate system has been impacting many biogeophysical systems and their interactions globally (IPCC, 2013)
Changes have been great in the northern high latitudes, where observations show shifts in the amount and phase of precipitation, diminishing seasonal snow cover, retreat and loss of glaciers, warming and thawing of permafrost, earlier breakup of seasonal freshwater ice cover, changes in the timing and magnitude of river discharge, and altered composition, structure, and density of terrestrial vegetation communities
Iterations were continued until the difference in the φ and β estimates in two consecutive steps was less than 1 %; the value of β was estimated from the de-autocorrelated time series based on the method of Sen (1968)
Summary
Recent warming of the Earth’s climate system has been impacting many biogeophysical systems and their interactions globally (IPCC, 2013). Evaluating change across data sets is challenging as data may not be homogeneous; it typically reflects different spatial and temporal scales (e.g., in situ versus a satellite-derived average), and may be responding to different processes depending on how and where measurements are collected. Anthropogenic factors such as land and water management may have a considerable impact (Nazemi and Wheater, 2014) and confound interpretation of Earth system change
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