Spatial and temporal variation in weather events critical for boreal agriculture: III Frost and winter time fluctuation

Authors

  • Pirjo Peltonen-Sainio Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke), Management and Production of Renewable Resources, FI-31600 Jokioinen, Finland
  • Pentti Pirinen Finnish Meteorological Institute, PL 503, FI-00560 Helsinki, Finland
  • Mikko Laapas Finnish Meteorological Institute, PL 503, FI-00560 Helsinki, Finland
  • Hanna M. Mäkelä Finnish Meteorological Institute, PL 503, FI-00560 Helsinki, Finland
  • Hannu Ojanen Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke), Green Technology, FI-31600 Jokioinen, Finland
  • Ari Venäläinen Finnish Meteorological Institute, PL 503, FI-00560 Helsinki, Finland

Keywords:

crop, frost, overwintering, probability, sowing time, spatial variation

Abstract

In the boreal zone of Europe, differences between the four seasons are considerable. Also, the within-season variation in climatic conditions is substantial. This has many impacts on agriculture that are exceptional when compared to any other environmental zone in Europe. All the meteorological data were based on weather observations made by the Finnish Meteorological Institute. Likelihood (%) for soil frost (≤ 0 °C at 20 cm soil depth) at nine weather stations, and late snow cover (> 1 cm) (10 km × 10 km grid) were estimated for late spring. Probabilities (%) of night frost at the ground surface (March-September) were calculated at nine weather stations by frequencies of the lowest observed night-time temperature: a) between –2 and –5 °C (mild), b) ≤ –5 °C (moderate) and c) ≤ –9 °C (severe). Also, the probabilities (%) of night frost in mid-summer were estimated (≤ –1 °C for at least five hours). Furthermore, a significant shift from mild to below-freezing conditions was measured in winter as a period of at least ten days with daily maximum temperatures above 0°C followed by at least a 10-day period with daily mean temperatures below –5°C in order to characterize high fluctuating winter conditions. All these except late snow cover constitute high risks to crop production. Deep soil frost may postpone sowings, while in advanced springs, night frost may cause damage. For winter crops and perennials, shifts from mild to cold spells outside the growing season are particularly detrimental. Again the data may have many other applications beyond the assessments highlighted in this paper.

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Articles

Published

2016-03-31

How to Cite

Peltonen-Sainio, P., Pirinen, P., Laapas, M., Mäkelä, H. M., Ojanen, H., & Venäläinen, A. (2016). Spatial and temporal variation in weather events critical for boreal agriculture: III Frost and winter time fluctuation. Agricultural and Food Science, 25(1), 71–80. https://doi.org/10.23986/afsci.51467
Received 2015-07-07
Accepted 2016-02-22
Published 2016-03-31