Hotspots and key periods of Greenland climate change during the past six decades

Jakob Abermann*, Birger Hansen, Magnus Lund, Stefan Wacker, Mojtaba Karami, John Cappelen

*Corresponding author for this work
17 Citations (Scopus)
72 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

We investigated air temperature and pressure gradients and their trends for the period 1996–2014 in Greenland and compared these to other periods since 1958. Both latitudinal temperature and pressure gradients were strongest during winter. An overall temperature increase up to 0.15 °C year−1 was observed for 1996–2014. The strongest warming happened during February at the West coast (up to 0.6 °C year−1), weaker but consistent and significant warming occurred during summer months (up to 0.3 °C year−1) both in West and East Greenland. Pressure trends on a monthly basis were mainly negative, but largely statistically non-significant. Compared with other time windows in the past six decades, the period 1996–2014 yielded an above-average warming trend. Northeast Greenland and the area around Zackenberg follow the general pattern but are on the lower boundary of observed significant trends in Greenland. We conclude that temperature-driven ecosystem changes as observed in Zackenberg may well be exceeded in other areas of Greenland.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAmbio
Volume46
Issue numberSuppl. 1
Pages (from-to)3-11
Number of pages9
ISSN0044-7447
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Keywords

  • Air pressure trends
  • Ecosystem changes
  • Greenland climate change
  • Temperature trends

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Hotspots and key periods of Greenland climate change during the past six decades'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this