Monthly air temperature trends in Switzerland 1901-2000 and 1975-2004
Author(s)
Reinhard, Michael
Date issued
2008
In
Theoretical and Applied Climatology
Vol
1-4
No
91
From page
27
To page
34
Subjects
DANGEROUS CLIMATE-CHANGE SWISS ALPS VARIABILITY SNOW PRECIPITATION RADIATION SURFACE RANGE SCALE SHIFT
Abstract
We analysed long-term temperature trends based on 12 homogenised series of monthly temperature data in Switzerland at elevations between 316 m.a.s.l. and 2490 m.a.s.l for the 20(th) century (1901-2000) and for the last thirty years (1975-2004). Comparisons were made between these two periods, with changes standardised to decadal trends. Our results show mean decadal trends of +0.135 degrees C during the 20(th) century and +0.57 degrees C based on the last three decades only. These trends are more than twice as high as the averaged temperature trends in the Northern Hemisphere. Most stations behave quite similarly, indicating that the increasing trends are linked to large-scale rather than local processes. Seasonal analyses show that the greatest temperature increase in the 1975-2004 period occurred during spring and summer whereas they were particularly weak in spring during the 20(th) century. Recent temperature increases are as much related to increases in maximum temperatures as to increases in minimum temperature, a trend that was not apparent in the 1901-2000 period. The different seasonal warming rates may have important consequences for vegetation, natural disasters, human health, and energy consumption, amongst others. The strong increase in summer temperatures helps to explain the accelerated glacier retreat in the Alps since 1980.
Publication type
journal article
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