Climate and water availability indicators in Canada: Challenges and a way forward. Part II – Historic trends

2015 
Climate variability is recognized as an important influence on the availability of water throughout Canada, and projected climate change is anticipated to alter the amount, timing and distribution of water. This is Part II of a three-part (Parts I and III, this issue) analysis of water availability in Canada. Part II surveys current research, primarily Canadian in origin, on historical trends in climate and hydrologic indicators relevant to assessing water availability. Information on hydro-climate trends is not evenly distributed across Canada. Hydrologic trend research focuses on the North, British Columbia and the Prairies (Saskatchewan) with some research in Quebec, very little in Ontario and minimal analysis for Atlantic Canada. Overall, there is less research on trends in climatological indicators (drought, evapotranspiration, soil moisture); generally, the focus is on the Prairies. Hydrologic trends from basin-scale case studies are reported but inter-comparison is constrained by different periods ...
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