Soils Cool as
Climate Warms in Great Lakes Region,
USA
Scott Isard, Randall Schaetzl and Jeffrey Andresen
We modeled soil temperatures at
50-cm depth, using 1951-2000 air temperature and precipitation data from 194
National Weather Service stations in Wisconsin and Michigan. The accuracy and bias of the physical model
used in this study was validated by comparing its output data to 22,401 actual
soil temperature readings taken from sandy soils at 39 forested sites
throughout northern Michigan;
the model was shown to have almost no temperature bias. Although mean annual air temperatures across
the region show no strong spatial or temporal trends over the 50-year period,
at many sites, especially in Wisconsin,
wintertime air temperatures have been increasing slightly in recent years. Conversely, mean annual soil temperatures
have been decreasing at most sites in the region, some by more than 0.5oC. Likewise, wintertime soil temperatures are
also decreasing, especially at sites downwind from the Great
Lakes - many of which are in snowbelt
locations. Increasing wintertime air
temperatures over the past fifty years coincide with (and probably have lead
to) more variable and thinner snowpacks, lessening their insulating impact and
contributing to decreasing wintertime soil temperatures that our model show are
occurring in the eastern and northern parts of the region. These findings illustrate the complex
response of natural systems to slow atmospheric warming, and draw attention to
the potential changes that are occurring in in growing season characteristics,
phenology, and spring runoff characteristics in the Great
Lakes region.