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Research Shows Steady Decline In Snowfall At Yellowstone National Park

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Published Date

April 10, 2015
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These poor snow conditions in Yellowstone, photographed in February, might reflect the new norm, not merely an aberration, according to snowpack research in the park.

This past winter saw an earlier-than-usual decline in snowpack on Yellowstone National Park roads, one that forced the park to shut down access to some snowmobilers and snowcoaches. While some might write that off to simply an unseasonal winter, record-keeping in the park shows less snow is falling there and that in some parts of Yellowstone the once-typical Rocky Mountain winter is actually much shorter than it used to be.

One can debate whether this is simply a natural cycling of the Earth's climate or human-driven global warming -- Yellowstone researchers point to the latter -- but the bottom line, as they note, is that "(D)espite all these caveats and complications, we are confident in saying the long-term forecast in Yellowstone calls for less snow. There may be a few decades-long bumps and flat places in the trend, but the overall picture of a declining staircase is clear. People who rely on water that begins its life as snow in the mountains of Yellowstone should be aware of this fact and plan accordingly."

The snowfall study was released this week in a special climate change edition of Yellowstone Science. The issue offers a range of articles involving climate change in Yellowstone, from the trends in snowfall to how the park's forests will fare under a changing climate.

Whitebark pine was projected to have the greatest loss in area of suitable habitat in the GYE. The areal extent of adult reproductive aged stands has already declined dramatically across the GYE due to mortality from mountain pine beetles. Will whitebark pine be entirely lost from the GYE? Hope for the persistence of whitebark pine in GYE is bolstered by its history. Pollen records indicate that five-needle pine (whitebark and/or limber pine) remained in the region over the past 10,000 years even during the relatively warm hypsithermal period (Iglesias et al., in revision). More research is needed, but various hypotheses suggest viable populations can remain through the projected harsher climate in 2100.

As for snowfall in the park, the researchers detected a trend the layman might find interesting: "We have seen that the longest snow course records in Yellowstone had no significant gain or loss of April 1 SWE (snow water equivalent) from the early 20th century to present day because they include both low snow eras of the Dust Bowl 1930s and the 2000s."

However, the authors went on to note, if you measured snowpack from 1961-2012 -- the longest continuous period during which researchers could rely on SNOTEL data collections from the same sites -- "...70% (21/30) of the sites had significant declines during this 52-year period."

What was behind the decline in snowpack?

"... taken as an average, sites with declining snowpack during 1961'“2012 generally had lower precipitation and higher average daily maximum temperatures during the winter months," the article's authors wrote.

"These patterns suggest increasing temperatures during January, February, March, and April have caused significant snow declines in locations with higher average temperatures by pushing them over the freezing point more often. Other factors contributing to site-to-site differences in snowpack patterns include wind scouring (removes snow) and amount of tree cover (protects snow from sun and wind). Interestingly, the elevations of declining vs. no-trend sites overlapped and were not a good explanation of site-to-site differences."

They go on to say that warmer temperatures are the most likely cause for the decline, and that "(L)ocations that were generally wetter and cooler have not yet demonstrated declines, but with continued climate change will begin to lose their snowpack too."

Strikingly, the researchers found that in recent years some parts of Yellowstone have experienced 80-100 more days of above-freezing temperatures that they did in the mid-1980s. "In other words, the season during which temperatures are above freezing is roughly 3 months longer now than it was 25 years ago at the Northeast Entrance."

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Comments

Eric, my feeling is with global warming you have precipitation change. It effects ocean currents, which effects where the moisture goes.


it doesn't really matter, does it?

Kurt,  is the snowpack in the Sierra Nevadas low because of temperature or because of lack of precipitation?  Is Lake Mead 136 feet below pool level because of temperature or lack of precipitation?  Precipitation level is a critical variable to snowpack levels.  One has to wonder (not really) why those doing this "study" failed to consider it. 


True, but in some locals, it may be a more dramatic shift. In studies of the dust bowl days they say the cultivation of ground that had never grown crops, contributed to the cause of the dust bowl.


Eric, my feeling is with global warming you have precipitation change.

And without global warming, you have precipitation change.


A recent Gallup Poll shows that very few intelligent people buy into the global warming scam. 

http://www.gallup.com/poll/182159/college-educated-republicans-skeptical...


Cute. You think it's news that a poll found that republicans thought less of climate change than democrats?


Beachdumb is confusing education with intelligence particularly when it comes to Republicans. Their views have more to do with Fox News and ideology and little to do with intelligence.


News Flash! A big storm is blowing into the Pacific Northwest this weekend and will dump up to two feet of snow in the mountain passes. People are advised to carry chains. And just when you thought it was safe to believe in global warming!

Seriously, Mother Nature has an agenda of her own. She thinks in 10,000-year soundbites, the last one of which began with ice covering much of North America. She then destroyed the Bering Land Bridge and hasn't stopped since. Meanwhile, somewhere out there in the Asteroid Belt, another behemoth has our name on it. Shoemaker-Levy crashed into Jupiter, but that will not always be the case.

Living is dangerous to your health. Stop worrying about things you cannot change. Every day is a gift, and yes, the earth will go on without us. Now, where is that wind farm you want to sell me again? You say the earth will not survive without it? She's been doing a pretty good job for 5 billion years without us. But yes, the bumps and bruises of that are hard for us 70-year machines to take.


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