By Sid Perkins, Science Now, January 12, 2012
It seems counterintuitive, even ironic,
that global warming could cause some regions to experience colder conditions.
But a new study explains the Rube Goldberg-machine of climatic processes that
can link warmer-than-average summers to harsh winter weather in some parts of
the Northern Hemisphere.
In general, global average temperatures have been rising
since the late 1800s, but the most rapid warming has occurred in the past 40
years. And average temperatures in the Arctic have been rising at nearly twice
the global rate, says Judah Cohen, a climate modeler at the consulting firm
Atmospheric and Environmental Research in Lexington, Massachusetts. Despite
that trend, winters in the Northern Hemisphere have grown colder and more
extreme in southern Canada, the eastern United States, and much of northern
Eurasia, with England's record-setting cold spell in December 2010 as a case in
point.
A close look at climate data from 1988 through 2010,
including the extent of land and sea respectively covered by snow and ice,
helps explain how global warming drives regional cooling, Cohen and his colleagues report
online today in Environmental Research Letters. In their study, the researchers
combined climate and weather data from a variety of sources to estimate
Eurasian snow cover, and then they speculated about how that factor might have
influenced winter weather elsewhere in the Northern Hemisphere.
First, the strong warming in the Arctic in recent
decades, among other factors, has triggered widespread melting of sea ice. More
open water in the Arctic Ocean has led to more evaporation, which moisturizes
the overlying atmosphere, the researchers say. Previous studies have linked
warmer-than-average summer months to increased cloudiness over the ocean during
the following autumn. That, in turn, triggers increased snow coverage in
Siberia as winter approaches. As it turns out, the researchers found, snow
cover in October has the largest effect on climate in subsequent months.
That's because widespread autumn snow cover in Siberia
strengthens a semipermanent high-pressure system called, appropriately enough,
the Siberian high, which reinforces a climate phenomenon called the Arctic
Oscillation and steers frigid air southward to midlatitude regions throughout
the winter.
"This is completely plausible," says Anne
Nolin, a climate scientist at Oregon State University in Corvallis. The
correlations between warm summers and cold winters that originally led the
researchers to develop their idea don't prove cause and effect, but analyzing
these trends with climate models in future studies could help researchers
bolster what Nolin calls "an interesting set of connections."
"Northern Eurasia is the largest snow-covered
landmass in the world each winter," she notes. It only makes sense, she
argues, that it would have a big influence on the Northern Hemisphere's
climate. Indeed, she adds, previous studies have noted the link between
Siberian snow cover and climate in the northern Pacific.
The team's analyses suggest that climate cycles such as the El
Niño-Southern Oscillation, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, and the Atlantic
multidecadal oscillation can't explain the regional cooling trends seen in the
Northern Hemisphere during the past couple of decades as well as trends in
Siberian snow cover do. If better accounts of autumn snow-cover variability are
incorporated into climate models, scientists could provide more accurate
winter-weather forecasts, the researchers contend.
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