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Sensitivity of frost occurrence to temperature variability in the European Alps

✍ Scribed by Ingeborg Auer; Christoph Matulla; Reinhard Böhm; Markus Ungersböck; Maurizio Maugeri; Teresa Nanni; Rossella Pastorelli


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
366 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
0899-8418

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

In this study, we set out to investigate the linkage of frost frequency to monthly mean temperature and its sensitivity to temperature changes. According to other related studies, the linkage between frost frequency and monthly mean temperature is approximated month per month via hyperbolic tangent functions. These models are validated using three validation experiments including split sample tests and temporal cross‐validation. As there are quality‐checked station data in Austria, whose temporal resolution and length allow for such a validation procedure, the validation experiments are conducted there.

After the performance of the empirical models is evaluated and found adequate, the hyperbolic tangent approach is applied to about 500 stations within the so called Greater Alpine region (GAR), which extends from about 4 °E to 18 °E and from 44 °N to 49 °N. Using these models, it is possible to derive the sensitivity of frost frequency for any location for which the annual temperature cycle is known. This strategy is explicitly demonstrated for the Po Plain, where vertical temperature profiles on a monthly base are on hand as well as in Austria, where spatially high resolved maps of monthly mean temperature are available. Moreover, at stations for which long‐term homogenised series of monthly mean temperature are available, reconstructions of frost frequency via the empirical models are done, returning to historical periods where no measurements of minimum temperature exist.

On the basis of these findings, the impact of a possible future warming can be assessed, which is essential with regard to glaciers, permafrost and avalanches. Reduction in frost might bring positive economic aspects for agriculture, but negative consequences for low level skiing areas. Copyright © 2005 Royal Meteorological Society.


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