Wr. Skinner et Ja. Majorowicz, Regional climatic warming and associated twentieth century land-cover changes in north-western North America, CLIMATE RES, 12(1), 1999, pp. 39-52
Twentieth century (1900 to 1990) changes in annual surface air temperature
(SAT) are compared with contemporaneous changes in annual ground surface te
mperature (GST) over an area extending from east of the Cordillera in north
-western Canada, to Texas in the south-central United States. One of the la
rgest SAT increases over the past century has occurred in the north-western
portion of this study area. It also coincides (spatial regression coeffici
ent r = 0.70) with the largest positive GST anomaly in northern North Ameri
ca. However, there are large areas of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and s
outhern Northwest Territories that exhibit spatially coherent patterns of d
ifferences between SAT and GST warming. These differences appear to be rela
ted to twentieth century land-use and land-cover changes. The highest GST w
arming has been observed in large areas where extensive land-cover changes,
such as the clearing of forests, increased forest fire activity, and conve
rsion of prairie grassland to agricultural land, have occurred. It is hypot
hesized that land-cover change dramatically alters surface characteristics
affecting the radiation budget and energy balance. The partitioning between
sensible and latent fluxes is altered and the potential for land drying is
increased. Calculated flux changes associated with land-cover change are c
omparable in magnitude with greenhouse gas radiative forcing. It therefore
appears that through a step change in GST, land-cover changes have contribu
ted to a portion of the observed SAT warming in this region.