4.5 Article

A century of climate and ecosystem change in Western Montana: what do temperature trends portend?

Journal

CLIMATIC CHANGE
Volume 98, Issue 1-2, Pages 133-154

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-009-9642-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U. S. Geological Survey's Western Mountain Initiative
  2. Global Change Program

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The physical science linking human-induced increases in greenhouse gasses to the warming of the global climate system is well established, but the implications of this warming for ecosystem processes and services at regional scales is still poorly understood. Thus, the objectives of this work were to: (1) describe rates of change in temperature averages and extremes for western Montana, a region containing sensitive resources and ecosystems, (2) investigate associations between Montana temperature change to hemispheric and global temperature change, (3) provide climate analysis tools for land and resource managers responsible for researching and maintaining renewable resources, habitat, and threatened/endangered species and (4) integrate our findings into a more general assessment of climate impacts on ecosystem processes and services over the past century. Over 100 years of daily and monthly temperature data collected in western Montana, USA are analyzed for long-term changes in seasonal averages and daily extremes. In particular, variability and trends in temperature above or below ecologically and socially meaningful thresholds within this region (e.g., -17.8A degrees C (0A degrees F), 0A degrees C (32A degrees F), and 32.2A degrees C (90A degrees F)) are assessed. The daily temperature time series reveal extremely cold days (a parts per thousand currency signaEuro parts per thousand a'17.8A degrees C) terminate on average 20 days earlier and decline in number, whereas extremely hot days (a parts per thousand yen32A degrees C) show a three-fold increase in number and a 24-day increase in seasonal window during which they occur. Results show that regionally important thresholds have been exceeded, the most recent of which include the timing and number of the 0A degrees C freeze/thaw temperatures during spring and fall. Finally, we close with a discussion on the implications for Montana's ecosystems. Special attention is given to critical processes that respond non-linearly as temperatures exceed critical thresholds, and have positive feedbacks that amplify the changes.

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