4.0 Article

A Third Generation of Homogenized Temperature for Trend Analysis and Monitoring Changes in Canada's Climate

Journal

ATMOSPHERE-OCEAN
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages 173-191

Publisher

CMOS-SCMO
DOI: 10.1080/07055900.2020.1765728

Keywords

climate change; climate trends; climate monitoring; surface air temperature; homogeneity testing; quantile-matching adjustments; Reference Climate Stations; Nav Canada stations

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This study presents the development of a new dataset of homogenized temperature for use in trend analysis and monitoring climate change in Canada. This dataset contains daily data for 780 locations across the country: 508 locations with an active station (current observations) and long record (starting prior to 1990); 53 locations with an active station and short record (starting after 1990); and 219 locations with no current observations (station closed) but with more than 30 years of data. Daily observations from nearby sites were often merged into a single record to create a long time series. This new dataset includes observations taken at Reference Climate Stations and from the Canada Aviation Weather Services, which are used to extend past climate observations into recent times. First, the data were quality controlled. The daily minimum temperature was adjusted for the change in observing time at principal stations in 1961. Parallel daily data were used to detect non-climatic shifts when the observations from nearby sites were merged. Series of annual and seasonal mean temperatures were tested for homogeneity. Daily temperatures were adjusted using a quantile-matching procedure if needed. Two main causes of data inhomogeneity affecting the trends over the 1948-2018 and 1900-2018 periods were identified. First, the change in observing time in 1961 introduced a cold bias in the annual means of the daily minimum temperatures after 1961. Second, merging observations from airport stations with older records has often created an artificial decreasing shift in the unadjusted data because of the better exposure of the instruments at airport stations. This new homogenized dataset shows a slightly stronger warming than the unadjusted data: the trend in the annual mean temperature for Canada has changed from 1.69 degrees to 1.74 degrees C for 1948-2018, and the trend for southern Canada has changed from 1.32 degrees to 1.62 degrees C for 1900-2018 because of all the adjustments applied to daily temperature in this study.

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