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Changing growing season observed in Canada

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Abstract

It is theoretically interesting for climate change detection and practically important for agricultural producers to know whether climate change has influenced agroclimatic conditions and, if so, what the potential impacts are. We present analyses on statistical differences in means and variances of agroclimatic indices between three 30-year periods in the 20th century (i.e., 1911–1940, 1941–1970 and 1971–2000). We found many occurrences of statistically significant changes in means between pairs of the three 30-year periods. The findings consistently support agroclimatic trends identified from trend analysis as an earlier growing season start and an earlier end to spring frost (SF), together with an extended growing season, more frost-free days (FFD) and more available heat units were often found in the later 30-year periods as compared to the earlier ones. In addition, this study provides more detailed quantitative information than the trend signals for the practical interests of agricultural applications. Significant changes were detected for SF and FFD at a much larger percentage of stations between the latter two 30-year periods (1941–1970 vs. 1971–2000) as compared to the earlier two periods (1911–1940 vs. 1941–1970). In contrast, changes in variances of the selected agroclimatic indices were less evident than changes in their means, based on the percentage of stations showing significant differences. We also present new climate averages of the selected agroclimatic indices that can be useful for agricultural planning and management.

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Acknowledgements

We thank Dr. Kai Chen and Feng Yang at Environment Canada for their contribution to the definitions and the calculations of agroclimatic indices used in this study. Three anonymous reviewers and the associate editor are acknowledged for their very helpful comments that improved the manuscript. This is ECORC Contribution No 11-210.

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Correspondence to Budong Qian.

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Qian, B., Gameda, S., Zhang, X. et al. Changing growing season observed in Canada. Climatic Change 112, 339–353 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-011-0220-8

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