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How can meteorological observations and microclimate simulations improve understanding of 1913-2010 climate change around Abisko, Swedish Lapland?

Yang, Zhenlin LU ; Hanna, Edward ; Callaghan, Terry V. and Jonasson, Christer (2012) In Meteorological Applications 19(4). p.454-463
Abstract
A detailed analysis of 2 years' hourly microclimatic (mainly surface air temperature) data recently acquired from locations widely dispersed over 700 km2 in the Abisko catchment encompassing Lake Tornetrask in Swedish Lapland is presented in this study. This project is designed to explore the effects of microclimatic variability, past and future climate change (1913-2100) on regional vegetation and land-use changes, at an unique Arctic ecological and climate monitoring site, to aid adaptation of stakeholders to future climate change. Dominant altitudinal lapse rate and radiation effects during summer are revealed in detailed analysis of spatial variations in temperature between the different sites, which become largely negated during... (More)
A detailed analysis of 2 years' hourly microclimatic (mainly surface air temperature) data recently acquired from locations widely dispersed over 700 km2 in the Abisko catchment encompassing Lake Tornetrask in Swedish Lapland is presented in this study. This project is designed to explore the effects of microclimatic variability, past and future climate change (1913-2100) on regional vegetation and land-use changes, at an unique Arctic ecological and climate monitoring site, to aid adaptation of stakeholders to future climate change. Dominant altitudinal lapse rate and radiation effects during summer are revealed in detailed analysis of spatial variations in temperature between the different sites, which become largely negated during winter when cold-air ponding is much more significant. Moreover, near-shore temperatures are moderated significantly by Lake Tornetrask during the spring lake-ice melt season. The extent to which synoptic meteorological conditions affect these factors is explored. Examples of gridded temperature maps for the Abisko region are also presented, produced using a downscaling model based on the temperature data, which have numerous ecological and other applications. The long-term Abisko Scientific Research Station meteorological record, which spans almost a century from 1913 to present is also explored, for evidence of climate change, to set the temperature logger data in a long-term climate context. Exploratory analysis of the possible influence of future regional climate change on ecological/vegetation zones is also briefly discussed. Copyright (C) 2011 Royal Meteorological Society (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
climate change, Sweden, temperature, Arctic, adaptation
in
Meteorological Applications
volume
19
issue
4
pages
454 - 463
publisher
Cambridge University Press
external identifiers
  • wos:000312147800008
  • scopus:84870710062
ISSN
1350-4827
DOI
10.1002/met.276
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
913c0233-028d-4bb8-a0b9-3bf744eca9bd (old id 3368015)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:58:42
date last changed
2022-04-04 23:09:35
@article{913c0233-028d-4bb8-a0b9-3bf744eca9bd,
  abstract     = {{A detailed analysis of 2 years' hourly microclimatic (mainly surface air temperature) data recently acquired from locations widely dispersed over 700 km2 in the Abisko catchment encompassing Lake Tornetrask in Swedish Lapland is presented in this study. This project is designed to explore the effects of microclimatic variability, past and future climate change (1913-2100) on regional vegetation and land-use changes, at an unique Arctic ecological and climate monitoring site, to aid adaptation of stakeholders to future climate change. Dominant altitudinal lapse rate and radiation effects during summer are revealed in detailed analysis of spatial variations in temperature between the different sites, which become largely negated during winter when cold-air ponding is much more significant. Moreover, near-shore temperatures are moderated significantly by Lake Tornetrask during the spring lake-ice melt season. The extent to which synoptic meteorological conditions affect these factors is explored. Examples of gridded temperature maps for the Abisko region are also presented, produced using a downscaling model based on the temperature data, which have numerous ecological and other applications. The long-term Abisko Scientific Research Station meteorological record, which spans almost a century from 1913 to present is also explored, for evidence of climate change, to set the temperature logger data in a long-term climate context. Exploratory analysis of the possible influence of future regional climate change on ecological/vegetation zones is also briefly discussed. Copyright (C) 2011 Royal Meteorological Society}},
  author       = {{Yang, Zhenlin and Hanna, Edward and Callaghan, Terry V. and Jonasson, Christer}},
  issn         = {{1350-4827}},
  keywords     = {{climate change; Sweden; temperature; Arctic; adaptation}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{454--463}},
  publisher    = {{Cambridge University Press}},
  series       = {{Meteorological Applications}},
  title        = {{How can meteorological observations and microclimate simulations improve understanding of 1913-2010 climate change around Abisko, Swedish Lapland?}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/met.276}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/met.276}},
  volume       = {{19}},
  year         = {{2012}},
}