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CAG Quebec 2008 - Prairie drought and tree rings
Instrumental records of drought on the Canadian Prairies cover, at most, the last one hundred years. In this presentation, I describe how tree rings can be used to extend our perspective of the severity, frequency and causes of Prairie drought
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- Slide 1: Tree rings and Prairie drought
Scott St . George
Geological Survey of Canada
- Slide 2: How bad can
Prairie drought get?
- Slide 3: 100
years of stream and lake gauging
- Slide 4: resource allocation
- Slide 5: worst-case scenarios
- Slide 9: 100
years of stream and lake gauging
- Slide 10: not enough
- Slide 12: How bad can
Prairie drought get?
- Slide 13: Prairie tree-ring network
Northern Saskatchewan
Eastern Rockies
Northwestern
Ontario
Southern Manitoba
- Slide 14: Regional tree growth and
inferred summer climate in the
Winnipeg River basin, Canada
since AD 1783
Scott St. George
David Meko
Mike Evans
in press, Quaternary Research
- Slide 15: The tree-ring record of summer
drought in the Canadian Prairies
Scott St. George
David Meko Greg Pederson
Martin-Phillippe Girardin David Sauchyn
Glen MacDonald Jacques Tardif
Erik Nielsen Emma Watson
Submitted to the Journal of Climate, January 2008
- Slide 16: 3
Seasonality
Accuracy
Drought history
- Slide 17: Seasonality
- Slide 18: Prairie tree-ring network
Northern Saskatchewan
Eastern Rockies
Northwestern
Ontario
Southern Manitoba
- Slide 19: Prairie trees principally track
summer precipitation
90 82
Number of sites
75
60
45
30 24
15 7
3
0
19
Autumn Winter Spring Summer Autumn
- Slide 20: 20
- Slide 21: Vaganov-Shashkin model of
tree-ring formation
Gr(t) = g E (t) • min[g T (t), g W (t)]
Total Solar radiation Temperature Water balance
growth rate growth rate growth rate growth rate
- Slide 22: INPUT Daily climate
data
MODEL Vaganov-Shashkin
model
Synthetic
OUT Daily growth
rates
Cell
characteristics
ringwidth
chronologies
- Slide 23: INPUT Daily climate
data
MODEL Vaganov-Shashkin
model
Synthetic
OUT Daily growth
rates
Cell
characteristics
ringwidth
chronologies
- Slide 24: Medicine Hat, Alberta
Source: Environment Canada, Adjusted Historical Canadian Climate Data, 1895 – 2006
- Slide 25: 25
- Slide 26: 26
- Slide 28: El Niño (1983)
- Slide 29: ENSO and winter ppt
Correlation between CTI and winter precipitation (● = significant at p = 0.05)
- Slide 30: ENSO and PDSI
Correlation between CTI and summer PDSI (● = significant at p = 0.05)
- Slide 31: Prairie ringwidth records
138
Significant correlation with ENSO
4
Expected from random chance
6.9 31
- Slide 32: 32
- Slide 34: Accuracy
- Slide 35: “ This
must
be
voodoo.”
Anonymous water
manager
- Slide 36: How good are
drought records
from tree rings?
- Slide 37: Ringwidth as a proxy for
‘Lethbridge’ PDSI
- Slide 38: 755 m3/s
847 m3/s
809 m3/s
770 m3/s
823 m3/s
787 m3/s
901 m3/s
3
- Slide 39: Error of the estimate
- Slide 40: Error of the estimate
- Slide 41: 755 m3/s
847 m3/s
809 m3/s
770 m3/s
823 m3/s
787 m3/s
901 m3/s
3
- Slide 42: Very wet
Wet
Average
Dry
Very dry
- Slide 44: Drought history
- Slide 45: Prairie tree-ring network
Northern Saskatchewan
Eastern Rockies
Northwestern
Ontario
Southern Manitoba
- Slide 46: Eastern Rockies drought
- Slide 47: 1720s
- Slide 48: 58 oN
56 oN
1718 - 1722
54 oN
52 oN
50 oN
48 oN
oW
90
114 oW 9 6o W
108oW 10 2oW
Ringwidth anomaly
−2
-2 −1 0
0 1 2
+2 (deviations)
- Slide 49: 49
- Slide 51: La Niña (1989)
- Slide 52: ENSO and PDSI
Correlation between CTI and summer PDSI (● = significant at p = 0.05)
- Slide 54: 3 main
points
- Slide 55: Prairie trees record
summer
drought
- Slide 56: Pacific Ocean influences
are weak
- Slide 57: How bad can
Prairie drought get?
- Slide 58: worse
- Slide 59: Tree rings and Prairie drought
web.mac.com/scottstgeorge