Recent changes in the snow cover characteristics in Poland

被引:6
|
作者
Wibig, Joanna [1 ]
Jedruszkiewicz, Joanna [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lodz, Fac Geog Sci, Dept Meteorol & Climatol, Lodz, Poland
[2] Univ Lodz, Fac Geog Sci, Dept Meteorol & Climatol, Narutowicza 88, PL-90139 Lodz, Poland
关键词
Poland; snow cover accumulation; snow cover beginning; snow cover depth; snow cover duration; snow cover ending; snow cover linear trends; snow cover stability; ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION; SYNOPTIC CONDITIONS; HEAVY SNOWFALLS; VARIABILITY; DEPTH; PRECIPITATION; TEMPERATURE; MACROSCALE; DURATION; EUROPE;
D O I
10.1002/joc.8178
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Snow cover (SC) is a great indicator of climate change. It is highly related to temperature. Since the Polish climate faces warmer conditions, changes in the wintertime precipitation phase are observed. More frequent rainfall instead of snowfall is noticed at the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st centuries. This work presents the spatial distribution, its changes, and variabilities of selected parameters that described snow cover in Poland from 1966/1967 to 2020/2021. The snow characteristics used in the study comprise of SC duration (SCD), the first and last day with SC in the season (SCbeg and SCend), the potential duration of SC season (PSCD), SC stability (SCS), average, maximum and accumulated SC depth (HS, HSmax and AHS). The changes in snow cover waves were analysed. Generally, the Polish climate is mild in the west, where the snow cover is finer and occurs relatively rarely and becomes more continental toward the north-east, where the snow cover has a better condition to accumulate and preserve. The southern parts of the country are covered by mountain ranges of the Carpathians and Sudetes, where the snow cover remains the longest. The spatial distribution of the coefficient of variability is reversely proportional to SC characteristics-the highest in the north-east (especially for the HS, HSmax and AHS). The most significant changes in SC are related to a decrease in SCD (5-7 days/decade), HSmax (1-2 cm/decade) and AHS (30-60 cm/decade). At the same time, the snow cover season becomes considerably shorter (especially in the western and central parts-about 10 days/decade). The trends in SCS are not yet significant in most of the country. This study reveals that the snow cover in Poland is under constant change, and the negative trends, which were hardly or not visible at the end of the 20th century, in the last decades have become statistically significant in a greater number of Polish stations.
引用
收藏
页码:6925 / 6938
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Multiple Effects of Changes in Arctic Snow Cover
    Terry V. Callaghan
    Margareta Johansson
    Ross D. Brown
    Pavel Ya. Groisman
    Niklas Labba
    Vladimir Radionov
    Raymond S. Bradley
    Sylvie Blangy
    Olga N. Bulygina
    Torben R. Christensen
    Jonathan E. Colman
    Richard L. H. Essery
    Bruce C. Forbes
    Mads C. Forchhammer
    Vladimir N. Golubev
    Richard E. Honrath
    Glenn P. Juday
    Anna V. Meshcherskaya
    Gareth K. Phoenix
    John Pomeroy
    Arja Rautio
    David A. Robinson
    Niels M. Schmidt
    Mark C. Serreze
    Vladimir P. Shevchenko
    Alexander I. Shiklomanov
    Andrey B. Shmakin
    Peter Sköld
    Matthew Sturm
    Ming-ko Woo
    Eric F. Wood
    AMBIO, 2011, 40 : 32 - 45
  • [22] Multiple Effects of Changes in Arctic Snow Cover
    Callaghan, Terry V.
    Johansson, Margareta
    Brown, Ross D.
    Groisman, Pavel Ya
    Labba, Niklas
    Radionov, Vladimir
    Bradley, Raymond S.
    Blangy, Sylvie
    Bulygina, Olga N.
    Christensen, Torben R.
    Colman, Jonathan E.
    Essery, Richard L. H.
    Forbes, Bruce C.
    Forchhammer, Mads C.
    Golubev, Vladimir N.
    Honrath, Richard E.
    Juday, Glenn P.
    Meshcherskaya, Anna V.
    Phoenix, Gareth K.
    Pomeroy, John
    Rautio, Arja
    Robinson, David A.
    Schmidt, Niels M.
    Serreze, Mark C.
    Shevchenko, Vladimir P.
    Shiklomanov, Alexander I.
    Shmakin, Andrey B.
    Skold, Peter
    Sturm, Matthew
    Woo, Ming-ko
    Wood, Eric F.
    AMBIO, 2011, 40 : 32 - 45
  • [23] Recent fluctuation of snow cover on mountainous areas in Japan
    Shimizu, M
    Abe, O
    ANNALS OF GLACIOLOGY, VOL 32, 2001, 2001, 32 : 97 - 101
  • [24] Polar snow cover changes and global warming
    Ye, HC
    Mather, JR
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 1997, 17 (02) : 155 - 162
  • [26] A preliminary assessment of the socio-economic and environmental impacts of recent changes in winter snow cover in Scotland
    Harrison, SJ
    Winterbottom, SJ
    Johnson, RC
    SCOTTISH GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL, 2001, 117 (04): : 297 - 312
  • [27] Roles of surface wind, NDVI and snow cover in the recent changes in Asian dust storm occurrence frequency
    Lee, Jong-Jae
    Kim, Cheol-Hee
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2012, 59 : 366 - 375
  • [28] Forces for recent snow cover variation on the Mount Everest region
    Kattel, Dambaru Ballab
    Yao, Tandong
    JOURNAL OF EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCE, 2024, 134 (01)
  • [29] Recent snow cover variations and avalanche activities in the Southern Alps
    Valt, Mauro
    Cianfarra, Paola
    Moro, Daniele
    Zasso, Renato
    ISSW 09 EUROPE: INTERNATIONAL SNOW SCIENCE WORKSHOP, PROCEEDINGS, 2009, : 229 - +
  • [30] Icelandic snow cover characteristics derived from a gap-filled MODIS daily snow cover product
    Gunnarsson, Andri
    Gardarsson, Sigurdur M.
    Sveinsson, Oli G. B.
    HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2019, 23 (07) : 3021 - 3036