1. Widespread and Accelerated Decrease of Observed Mean and Extreme Snow Depth Over Europe
- Author
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Fontrodona Bach, A., van der Schrier, G., Melsen, L.A., Klein Tank, A.M.G., Teuling, A.J., Fontrodona Bach, A., van der Schrier, G., Melsen, L.A., Klein Tank, A.M.G., and Teuling, A.J.
- Abstract
Accumulated snow amounts are a key climate change indicator. It combines the competing effects of climate change-driven changes in precipitation and stronger snowmelt related to increasing temperatures. Here we provide observational evidence from a pan-European in situ data set that mean snow depth generally decreases stronger than extreme snow depth. Widespread decreases in maximum and mean snow depth were found over Europe, except in the coldest climates, with an average decrease of −12.2%/decade for mean snow depth and −11.4%/decade for maximum snow depth since 1951. These trends accelerated after the 1980s. This has strong implications for the availability of freshwater in spring, while extremes in snow depth, usually very disruptive to society, are decreasing at a slower pace.
- Published
- 2018