Snow cover duration trends observed at sites and predicted by multiple models
Richard Essery, Hyungjun Kim, Libo Wang, Paul Bartlett, Aaron Boone, Claire Brutel‐Vuilmet, Eleanor J. Burke, Matthias Cuntz, Bertrand Decharme, Emanuel Dutra, Xing Fang, Yeugeniy M. Gusev, Stefan Hagemann, Vanessa Haverd, Anna Kontu, Gerhard Krinner, Matthieu Lafaysse, Yves Lejeune, Thomas Marke, Danny Marks, Christoph Marty, Cécile B. Ménard, О. Н. Насонова, Tomoko Nitta, John W. Pomeroy, Gerd Schädler, В. А. Семенов, Tatiana G. Smirnova, Sean Swenson, Dmitry Turkov, Nander Wever, Hua Yuan
Abstract
Abstract. The 30-year simulations of seasonal snow cover in 22 physically based models driven with bias-corrected meteorological reanalyses are examined at four sites with long records of snow observations. Annual snow cover durations differ widely between models, but interannual variations are strongly correlated because of the common driving data. No significant trends are observed in starting dates for seasonal snow cover, but there are significant trends towards snow cover ending earlier at two of the sites in observations and most of the models. A simplified model with just two parameters controlling solar radiation and sensible heat contributions to snowmelt spans the ranges of snow cover durations and trends. This model predicts that sites where snow persists beyond annual peaks in solar radiation and air temperature will experience rapid decreases in snow cover duration with warming as snow begins to melt earlier and at times of year with more energy available for melting.- Cite:
- Richard Essery, Hyungjun Kim, Libo Wang, Paul Bartlett, Aaron Boone, Claire Brutel‐Vuilmet, Eleanor J. Burke, Matthias Cuntz, Bertrand Decharme, Emanuel Dutra, Xing Fang, Yeugeniy M. Gusev, Stefan Hagemann, Vanessa Haverd, Anna Kontu, Gerhard Krinner, Matthieu Lafaysse, Yves Lejeune, Thomas Marke, et al.. 2020. Snow cover duration trends observed at sites and predicted by multiple models. The Cryosphere, Volume 14, Issue 12, 14(12):4687–4698.
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@article{Essery-Kim-2020-Snow-cover, title = "Snow cover duration trends observed at sites and predicted by multiple models", author = {Essery, Richard and Kim, Hyungjun and Wang, Libo and Bartlett, Paul and Boone, Aaron and Brutel‐Vuilmet, Claire and Burke, Eleanor J. and Cuntz, Matthias and Decharme, Bertrand and Dutra, Emanuel and Fang, Xing and Gusev, Yeugeniy M. and Hagemann, Stefan and Haverd, Vanessa and Kontu, Anna and Krinner, Gerhard and Lafaysse, Matthieu and Lejeune, Yves and Marke, Thomas and Marks, Danny and Marty, Christoph and M{\'e}nard, C{\'e}cile B. and Насонова, О. Н. and Nitta, Tomoko and Pomeroy, John W. and Sch{\"a}dler, Gerd and Семенов, В. А. and Smirnova, Tatiana G. and Swenson, Sean and Turkov, Dmitry and Wever, Nander and Yuan, Hua}, journal = "The Cryosphere, Volume 14, Issue 12", volume = "14", number = "12", year = "2020", publisher = "Copernicus GmbH", url = "https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G20-100002", doi = "10.5194/tc-14-4687-2020", pages = "4687--4698", abstract = "Abstract. The 30-year simulations of seasonal snow cover in 22 physically based models driven with bias-corrected meteorological reanalyses are examined at four sites with long records of snow observations. Annual snow cover durations differ widely between models, but interannual variations are strongly correlated because of the common driving data. No significant trends are observed in starting dates for seasonal snow cover, but there are significant trends towards snow cover ending earlier at two of the sites in observations and most of the models. A simplified model with just two parameters controlling solar radiation and sensible heat contributions to snowmelt spans the ranges of snow cover durations and trends. This model predicts that sites where snow persists beyond annual peaks in solar radiation and air temperature will experience rapid decreases in snow cover duration with warming as snow begins to melt earlier and at times of year with more energy available for melting.", }
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The 30-year simulations of seasonal snow cover in 22 physically based models driven with bias-corrected meteorological reanalyses are examined at four sites with long records of snow observations. Annual snow cover durations differ widely between models, but interannual variations are strongly correlated because of the common driving data. No significant trends are observed in starting dates for seasonal snow cover, but there are significant trends towards snow cover ending earlier at two of the sites in observations and most of the models. A simplified model with just two parameters controlling solar radiation and sensible heat contributions to snowmelt spans the ranges of snow cover durations and trends. 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%0 Journal Article %T Snow cover duration trends observed at sites and predicted by multiple models %A Essery, Richard %A Kim, Hyungjun %A Wang, Libo %A Bartlett, Paul %A Boone, Aaron %A Brutel‐Vuilmet, Claire %A Burke, Eleanor J. %A Cuntz, Matthias %A Decharme, Bertrand %A Dutra, Emanuel %A Fang, Xing %A Gusev, Yeugeniy M. %A Hagemann, Stefan %A Haverd, Vanessa %A Kontu, Anna %A Krinner, Gerhard %A Lafaysse, Matthieu %A Lejeune, Yves %A Marke, Thomas %A Marks, Danny %A Marty, Christoph %A Ménard, Cécile B. %A Насонова, О. Н. %A Nitta, Tomoko %A Pomeroy, John W. %A Schädler, Gerd %A Семенов, В. А. %A Smirnova, Tatiana G. %A Swenson, Sean %A Turkov, Dmitry %A Wever, Nander %A Yuan, Hua %J The Cryosphere, Volume 14, Issue 12 %D 2020 %V 14 %N 12 %I Copernicus GmbH %F Essery-Kim-2020-Snow-cover %X Abstract. The 30-year simulations of seasonal snow cover in 22 physically based models driven with bias-corrected meteorological reanalyses are examined at four sites with long records of snow observations. Annual snow cover durations differ widely between models, but interannual variations are strongly correlated because of the common driving data. No significant trends are observed in starting dates for seasonal snow cover, but there are significant trends towards snow cover ending earlier at two of the sites in observations and most of the models. A simplified model with just two parameters controlling solar radiation and sensible heat contributions to snowmelt spans the ranges of snow cover durations and trends. This model predicts that sites where snow persists beyond annual peaks in solar radiation and air temperature will experience rapid decreases in snow cover duration with warming as snow begins to melt earlier and at times of year with more energy available for melting. %R 10.5194/tc-14-4687-2020 %U https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G20-100002 %U https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-14-4687-2020 %P 4687-4698
Markdown (Informal)
[Snow cover duration trends observed at sites and predicted by multiple models](https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G20-100002) (Essery et al., GWF 2020)
- Snow cover duration trends observed at sites and predicted by multiple models (Essery et al., GWF 2020)
ACL
- Richard Essery, Hyungjun Kim, Libo Wang, Paul Bartlett, Aaron Boone, Claire Brutel‐Vuilmet, Eleanor J. Burke, Matthias Cuntz, Bertrand Decharme, Emanuel Dutra, Xing Fang, Yeugeniy M. Gusev, Stefan Hagemann, Vanessa Haverd, Anna Kontu, Gerhard Krinner, Matthieu Lafaysse, Yves Lejeune, Thomas Marke, et al.. 2020. Snow cover duration trends observed at sites and predicted by multiple models. The Cryosphere, Volume 14, Issue 12, 14(12):4687–4698.