Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Hans W. Linderholm is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Hans W. Linderholm.


Journal of Climate | 2009

The Summer North Atlantic Oscillation: Past, Present, and Future

Chris K. Folland; Jeff R. Knight; Hans W. Linderholm; David Fereday; S. Ineson; James W. Hurrell

Summer climate in the North Atlantic‐European sector possesses a principal pattern of year-to-year variability that is the parallel to the well-known North Atlantic Oscillation in winter. This summer North Atlantic Oscillation (SNAO) is defined here as the first empirical orthogonal function (EOF) of observed summertime extratropical North Atlantic pressure at mean sea level. It is shown to be characterized by a more northerly location and smaller spatial scale than its winter counterpart. The SNAO is also detected by cluster analysis and has a near-equivalent barotropic structure on daily and monthly time scales. Although of lesser amplitude than its wintertime counterpart, the SNAO exerts a strong influence on northern European rainfall, temperature, and cloudiness through changes in the position of the North Atlantic storm track. It is, therefore, of key importance in generating summer climate extremes, including flooding, drought, and heat


Science Advances | 2015

Old World megadroughts and pluvials during the Common Era

Edward R. Cook; Richard Seager; Yochanan Kushnir; Keith R. Briffa; Ulf Büntgen; David Frank; Paul J. Krusic; Willy Tegel; Gerard van der Schrier; Laia Andreu-Hayles; M. G. L. Baillie; Claudia Baittinger; Niels Bleicher; Niels Bonde; David Brown; Marco Carrer; Richard J. Cooper; Katarina Čufar; Christoph Dittmar; Jan Esper; Carol Griggs; Björn E. Gunnarson; Björn Günther; Emilia Gutiérrez; Kristof Haneca; Samuli Helama; Franz Herzig; Karl-Uwe Heussner; Jutta Hofmann; Pavel Janda

An atlas of megadroughts in Europe and in the Mediterranean Basin during the Common Era provides insights into climate variability. Climate model projections suggest widespread drying in the Mediterranean Basin and wetting in Fennoscandia in the coming decades largely as a consequence of greenhouse gas forcing of climate. To place these and other “Old World” climate projections into historical perspective based on more complete estimates of natural hydroclimatic variability, we have developed the “Old World Drought Atlas” (OWDA), a set of year-to-year maps of tree-ring reconstructed summer wetness and dryness over Europe and the Mediterranean Basin during the Common Era. The OWDA matches historical accounts of severe drought and wetness with a spatial completeness not previously available. In addition, megadroughts reconstructed over north-central Europe in the 11th and mid-15th centuries reinforce other evidence from North America and Asia that droughts were more severe, extensive, and prolonged over Northern Hemisphere land areas before the 20th century, with an inadequate understanding of their causes. The OWDA provides new data to determine the causes of Old World drought and wetness and attribute past climate variability to forced and/or internal variability.


Global Change Biology | 2014

Spatial variability and temporal trends in water‐use efficiency of European forests

Matthias Saurer; Renato Spahni; David Frank; Fortunat Joos; Markus Leuenberger; Neil J. Loader; Danny McCarroll; Mary Gagen; Ben Poulter; Rolf T. W. Siegwolf; Laia Andreu-Hayles; Tatjana Boettger; Isabel Dorado Liñán; Ian J. Fairchild; Michael Friedrich; Emilia Gutiérrez; Marika Haupt; Emmi Hilasvuori; Ingo Heinrich; Gerd Helle; Håkan Grudd; Risto Jalkanen; Tom Levanič; Hans W. Linderholm; Iain Robertson; Eloni Sonninen; Kerstin Treydte; John S. Waterhouse; Ewan Woodley; Peter M. Wynn

The increasing carbon dioxide (CO2 ) concentration in the atmosphere in combination with climatic changes throughout the last century are likely to have had a profound effect on the physiology of trees: altering the carbon and water fluxes passing through the stomatal pores. However, the magnitude and spatial patterns of such changes in natural forests remain highly uncertain. Here, stable carbon isotope ratios from a network of 35 tree-ring sites located across Europe are investigated to determine the intrinsic water-use efficiency (iWUE), the ratio of photosynthesis to stomatal conductance from 1901 to 2000. The results were compared with simulations of a dynamic vegetation model (LPX-Bern 1.0) that integrates numerous ecosystem and land-atmosphere exchange processes in a theoretical framework. The spatial pattern of tree-ring derived iWUE of the investigated coniferous and deciduous species and the model results agreed significantly with a clear south-to-north gradient, as well as a general increase in iWUE over the 20th century. The magnitude of the iWUE increase was not spatially uniform, with the strongest increase observed and modelled for temperate forests in Central Europe, a region where summer soil-water availability decreased over the last century. We were able to demonstrate that the combined effects of increasing CO2 and climate change leading to soil drying have resulted in an accelerated increase in iWUE. These findings will help to reduce uncertainties in the land surface schemes of global climate models, where vegetation-climate feedbacks are currently still poorly constrained by observational data.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Recent recovery of the Siberian High intensity

Jee-Hoon Jeong; Tinghai Ou; Hans W. Linderholm; Baek-Min Kim; Seong-Joong Kim; Jong-Seong Kug; Deliang Chen

This study highlights the fast recovery of the wintertime Siberian High intensity (SHI) over the last two decades. The SHI showed a marked weakening trend from the 1970s to 1980s, leading to unprecedented low SHI in the early 1990s according to most observational data sets. This salient declining SHI trend, however, was sharply replaced by a fast recovery over the last two decades. Since the declining SHI trend has been considered as one of the plausible consequences of climate warming, the recent SHI recovery seemingly contradicts the continuous progression of climate warming in the Northern Hemisphere. We suggest that alleviated surface warming and decreased atmospheric stability in the central Siberia region, associated with an increase in Eurasian snow cover, in the recent two decades contributed to this rather unexpected SHI recovery. The prominent SHI change, however, is not reproduced by general circulation model (GCM) simulations used in the IPCC AR4. The GCMs indicate the steady weakening of the SHI for the entire 21st century, which is found to be associated with a decreasing Eurasian snow cover in the simulations. An improvement in predicting the future climate change in regional scale is desirable.


The Holocene | 2013

A 1200-year multiproxy record of tree growth and summer temperature at the northern pine forest limit of Europe

Danny McCarroll; Neil J. Loader; Risto Jalkanen; Mary Gagen; Håkan Grudd; Björn E. Gunnarson; Andreas J. Kirchhefer; Michael Friedrich; Hans W. Linderholm; Markus Lindholm; Tatjana Boettger; S.O. Los; Sabine Remmele; Yuri M. Kononov; Yasuhiro H. Yamazaki; Giles H. F. Young; Eduardo Zorita

Combining nine tree growth proxies from four sites, from the west coast of Norway to the Kola Peninsula of NW Russia, provides a well replicated (> 100 annual measurements per year) mean index of tree growth over the last 1200 years that represents the growth of much of the northern pine timberline forests of northern Fennoscandia. The simple mean of the nine series, z-scored over their common period, correlates strongly with mean June to August temperature averaged over this region (r = 0.81), allowing reconstructions of summer temperature based on regression and variance scaling. The reconstructions correlate significantly with gridded summer temperatures across the whole of Fennoscandia, extending north across Svalbard and south into Denmark. Uncertainty in the reconstructions is estimated by combining the uncertainty in mean tree growth with the uncertainty in the regression models. Over the last seven centuries the uncertainty is < 4.5% higher than in the 20th century, and reaches a maximum of 12% above recent levels during the 10th century. The results suggest that the 20th century was the warmest of the last 1200 years, but that it was not significantly different from the 11th century. The coldest century was the 17th. The impact of volcanic eruptions is clear, and a delayed recovery from pairs or multiple eruptions suggests the presence of some positive feedback mechanism. There is no clear and consistent link between northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures and solar forcing.


The Holocene | 2002

Low-frequency summer temperature variation in central Sweden since the tenth century inferred from tree rings

Bjön E. Gunnarson; Hans W. Linderholm

Living and subfossil Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) sampled close to the present tree-line in the central Scandinavian Mountains were used to build a continuous 1091-year long tree-ring-width chronology, spanning from ad 909 to 1998. Summer temperatures of the growth year had the highest influence on annual growth. The Håckren chronology represent a record of summer temperatures, where periods of low growth and poor regeneration of pine represent unfavourable climate conditions. Low growth was encountered in the mid-twelfth, thirteenth, late sixteenth, early seventeenth and late eighteenth centuries. Periods of high growth (high regeneration rate and above-average growth), indicating high summer temperatures, were recognized in the mid-tenth to late eleventh, mid-fourteenth, mid-seventeenth and twentieth centuries. As the chronology is well correlated with other high-latitude proxy data from Fennoscandia, as well as the Northern Hemisphere, we argue that the Håckren chronology is a valid proxy-data record of regional summer temperatures.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Interannual teleconnections between the summer North Atlantic Oscillation and the East Asian summer monsoon

Hans W. Linderholm; Tinghai Ou; Jee-Hoon Jeong; Chris K. Folland; Dao-Yi Gong; Hongbin Liu; Yu Liu; Deliang Chen

Here we present a study of the relationship between July-August (JA) mean climate over China, which is strongly linked to the East Asian summer monsoon (EASM), and the summer (JA) North Atlantic Oscillation (SNAO). The variations of temperature, precipitation, and cloud cover related to the SNAO were analyzed for the period 1951-2002 using gridded data sets as well as instrumental data from 160 stations in China. It was shown that the major patterns of summer climate over China are highly connected with the interannual variation of the SNAO, supporting a teleconnection between the North Atlantic region and East Asia. Based on the analyses of the daily and monthly reanalysis data sets, we propose possible mechanisms of this teleconnection. Changes in the position of the North Atlantic storm tracks and transient eddy activity associated with the positive (negative) SNAO phase contribute downstream to negative (positive) sea level pressure anomalies in northeastern East Asia. In negative SNAO years, a stationary wave pattern is excited from the southern SNAO center over northwestern Europe to northeastern East Asia. However, during positive SNAO years, a stationary wave pattern is excited extending from the SNAO center across the central Eurasian continent at around 40 degrees N and downstream to the southeast. This may explain a connection between the positive SNAO and atmospheric circulation in middle and southeastern China. (Less)


Geografiska Annaler Series A-physical Geography | 2005

SUMMER TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY IN CENTRAL SCANDINAVIA DURING THE LAST 3600 YEARS

Hans W. Linderholm; Björn E. Gunnarson

ABSTRACT. A Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) tree‐ring width chronology from Jämtland, in the central Scandinavian Mountains, built from living and sub‐fossil wood, covering the period 1632 BC to AD 2002, with a minor gap during AD 887–907, is presented. This is the first multi‐millennial tree‐ring chronology from the central parts of Fennoscandia. Pine growth in this tree line environment is mainly limited by summer temperatures, and hence the record can be viewed as a temperature proxy. Using the regional curve standardization (RCS) technique, pine‐growth variability on short and long time scales was retained and subsequently summer (June–August) temperatures were reconstructed yielding information on temperature variability during the last 3600 years. Several periods with anomalously warm or cold summers were found: 450–550 BC (warm), AD 300–400 (cold), AD 900–1000 (the Medieval Warm Period, warm) and AD 1550–1900 (Little Ice Age, cold). The coldest period was encountered in the fourth century AD and the warmest period 450 to 550 BC. However, the magnitude of these anomalies is uncertain since the replication of trees in the Jämtland record is low during those periods. The twentieth century warming does not stand out as an anomalous feature in the last 3600 years. Two multi‐millennial tree‐ring chronologies from Swedish and Finnish Lapland, which have previously been used as summer temperature proxies, agree well with the Jämtland record, indicating that the latter is a good proxy of local, but also regional, summer temperature variability.


Wetlands | 2004

An assessment of twentieth century tree-cover changes on a southern Swedish peatland combining dendrochronoloy and aerial photograph analysis

Hans W. Linderholm; Mats Leine

In the twentieth century, there have been increases in Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) coverage on peatlands in southern Sweden. In order to assess possible links to contemporary climate change, aerial photograph analysis and dendrochronology were combined to study recent pine cover changes at Anebymossen, a raised peat bog in south central Sweden. Multi-temporal analyses of three sets of panchromatic images from 1950 to 1993 showed a 30% increase of the marginal pine forest of the raised bog during that time, where a significant increase had occurred in the eastern part. Dendrochronological analyses were performed in two parts: the eastern part and the western part where the increase in pine coverage was considerably lower. The tree-ring growth patterns disclosed that a major event, most likely drainage, had occurred at Anebymossen in 1927, affecting tree growth at both sites. The effect of the drainage, which lowers the local ground-water table and hence promotes tree growth, was growth surges with a doubling of the annual increment rates. The effect was short lived in the western part, but continuous drainage in the eastern part caused growth enhancement until the beginning of the 1980s. We suggest that rather than being caused by climate change, the increase in pine coverage on Anebymossen was initiated by the considerable drainage in 1927. Since most peatlands in southern Sweden have been affected by anthropogenic activities, we suggest that it is difficult to make climatological interpretations of tree cover changes on peatlands using only aerial photograph analyses.


Journal of Climate | 2013

Impacts of Snow Initialization on Subseasonal Forecasts of Surface Air Temperature for the Cold Season

Jee-Hoon Jeong; Hans W. Linderholm; Sung-Ho Woo; Chris K. Folland; Baek-Min Kim; Seong-Joong Kim; Deliang Chen

AbstractThe present study examines the impacts of snow initialization on surface air temperature by a number of ensemble seasonal predictability experiments using the NCAR Community Atmosphere Model version 3 (CAM3) AGCM with and without snow initialization. The study attempts to isolate snow signals on surface air temperature. In this preliminary study, any effects of variations in sea ice extent are ignored and do not explicitly identify possible impacts on atmospheric circulation. The Canadian Meteorological Center (CMC) daily snow depth analysis was used in defining initial snow states, where anomaly rescaling was applied in order to account for the systematic bias of the CAM3 snow depth with respect to the CMC analysis. Two suites of seasonal (3 months long) ensemble hindcasts starting at each month in the colder part of the year (September–April) with and without the snow initialization were performed for 12 recent years (1999–2010), and the predictability skill of surface air temperature was estima...

Collaboration


Dive into the Hans W. Linderholm's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Deliang Chen

University of Gothenburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yu Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Huiming Song

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jee-Hoon Jeong

Chonnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peng Zhang

University of Gothenburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge