Alaska Terrestrial and Marine Climate Trends, 1957–2021
Author:
Ballinger Thomas J.1ORCID, Bhatt Uma S.23, Bieniek Peter A.1, Brettschneider Brian4, Lader Rick T.1, Littell Jeremy S.5, Thoman Richard L.1, Waigl Christine F.1, Walsh John E.1, Webster Melinda A.36
Affiliation:
1. a International Arctic Research Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska 2. b Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska 3. c Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska 4. d NOAA/National Weather Service, Anchorage, Alaska 5. e U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Climate Adaptation Science Center, Anchorage, Alaska 6. f Polar Science Center, Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
Abstract
Abstract
Some of the largest climatic changes in the Arctic have been observed in Alaska and the surrounding marginal seas. Near-surface air temperature (T2m), precipitation (P), snowfall, and sea ice changes have been previously documented, often in disparate studies. Here, we provide an updated, long-term trend analysis (1957–2021; n = 65 years) of such parameters in ERA5, NOAA U.S. Climate Gridded Dataset (NClimGrid), NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) Alaska climate division, and composite sea ice products preceding the upcoming Fifth National Climate Assessment (NCA5) and other near-future climate reports. In the past half century, annual T2m has broadly increased across Alaska, and during winter, spring, and autumn on the North Slope and North Panhandle (T2m > 0.50°C decade−1). Precipitation has also increased across climate divisions and appears strongly interrelated with temperature–sea ice feedbacks on the North Slope, specifically with increased (decreased) open water (sea ice extent). Snowfall equivalent (SFE) has decreased in autumn and spring, perhaps aligned with a regime transition of snow to rain, while winter SFE has broadly increased across the state. Sea ice decline and melt-season lengthening also have a pronounced signal around Alaska, with the largest trends in these parameters found in the Beaufort Sea. Alaska’s climatic changes are also placed in context against regional and contiguous U.S. air temperature trends and show ∼50% greater warming in Alaska relative to the lower-48 states. Alaska T2m increases also exceed those of any contiguous U.S. subregion, positioning Alaska at the forefront of U.S. climate warming.
Significance Statement
This study produces an updated, long-term trend analysis (1957–2021) of key Alaska climate parameters, including air temperature, precipitation (including snowfall equivalent), and sea ice, to inform upcoming climate assessment reports, including the Fifth National Climate Assessment (NCA5) scheduled for publication in 2023. Key findings include widespread annual and seasonal warming with increased precipitation across much of the state. Winter snowfall has broadly increased, but spring and autumn snowfalls have decreased as rainfall increased. Autumn warming and precipitation increases over the North Slope, in particular, appear related to decreased sea ice coverage in the Beaufort Sea and Chukchi Seas. These trends may result from interrelated processes that accelerate Alaska climate changes relative to those of the contiguous United States.
Funder
NASA Weather and Atmospheric Dynamics program Alaska EPSCoR and the state of Alaska USGS
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Subject
Atmospheric Science
Reference68 articles.
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