And we can
expect warm summer pastel colors like coral.
You can
expect warm summers and breezy winters with a very low chance of ever seeing snow when living in Bay City.
Not exact matches
With an El Niño
expected to develop late this
summer or in the fall, there is a chance that 2014 could move into the spot as the
warmest year on record, though the climate phenomenon's effects are generally most pronounced in the colder months, so the boost it gives to global temperatures could be reserved for 2015.
Will Clements, an ecotoxicologist at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, noted that
warming in the Rocky Mountains is
expected to reduce the mass of lying snow, thus decreasing
summer run - off.
Winters have been
warming more rapidly than
summers, and while less extreme cold sounds appealing, the future effects of blistering
summer heat are
expected to outweigh the benefits of milder winters.
A shift from spring wheat towards winter wheat production is
expected, due largely to
warmer winter temperatures that facilitate greater winter wheat survival, and
warmer summer temperatures that impair spring wheat production by inhibiting seed formation, germination, and early growth (Lanning et al. 2010).
Global
warming often conjures scenes of sweaty, scorching
summer days, but daytime temperatures aren't the only thing
expected to rise in a
warming world.
Along with human - caused
warming from greenhouse gases,
summers and winters are
expected to continue heating up.
Searing heat is the signature of climate change, and the scorching
summer temperatures blanketing much of the nation this week are exactly what we should
expect in an ever
warming world.
The CDC said it
expects to see cases of local transmission of the Zika virus this
summer in
warm, humid southern states such as Florida, Louisiana and Texas.
Well, we never know what kind of weather we can
expect in
summer... Although it has been quite
warm in August the past few years.
The retro - chic decor and garden courtyard make for a popular venue so
expect to queue at weekends (especially on those
warm Adelaide
summer nights).
In the
summer, in Paris, we
expect most days to be somewhere between
warm and very hot.
Like most of us, fleas and ticks love
warm weather so
expect to see more of these free loaders around your pet and your home in spring and
summer.
Each
summer the masses take to the great outdoors, and while you might not
expect it, the art world, too, has a love for sunshine and
warm breezes.
Regardless, I would posit the worsening winter ice formation is as
expected given the poles suffer first and winters
warm faster than
summers, BUT that this is happening within two years of the EN peak, which was my time line in 2015, one wonders if the combination of
warm EN - heated Pacific waters (oceans move slowly) and
warm air are a trailing edge of the EN effect OR this is signallibg a phase change driven by that EN, or is just an extreme winter event.
or Ballester et al. 2009 «Future changes in Central Europe heat waves
expected to mostly follow
summer mean
warming.»
However, in a
warming world, that snow will tend to melt earlier in the year, and thus we
expect to see spring and
summer snow cover extent decline.
I will be the first to admit that there has been less of it than I
expected, but that doesn't mean there hasn't been an avalanche of news about how this
summer is what global
warming looks like.
Summers are
expected to
warm more than the annual average and are likely to become drier.
Warmer stream temperatures, increased risk of habitat - damaging flooding, and reduced
summer streamflows are
expected to reduce suitable habitat by 47 percent for native fish like trout and salmon.
Hansen et al 1988 reported that they
expected extra
warming in the SE United States, a theme that was mentioned in his testimony in Washington in
summer 1987.
(Not least because I
expect to see ice - free Arctic
summers within that span — «ice - free» defined as sub-1 million km2 extent — and I
expect that there will be a
warming feedback from that event.
But as the
summer progressed, El Niño didn't form the way scientists
expected it to: sea surface temperatures in the eastern Pacific never
warmed enough to truly be called an El Niño, and the buzz fizzled out.
Searing heat is the signature of climate change, and the scorching
summer temperatures blanketing much of the nation this week are exactly what we should
expect in an ever
warming world.
The «+» symbols indicate the average climatological temperature during each month and the dashed line shows the maximum of these, an indication of the
expected warmest (usually
summer) temperature.
If the
warming was because of this we would
expect to see that Atmospheric
warming would be strongest when the Sun is shining - Daytime &
Summer.
2014 - 2015... The Ithaca Voice (Author): • This could be
warmest day in Ithaca since October 29 • A look ahead at Ithaca weather; temps this month are 7 degrees below average • Sub-freezing temps to bring light snow / sleet to Ithaca • Light snow in Ithaca area
expected as temperatures drop to 20s • Cool, wet week ahead for Ithaca • Ithaca can
expect mild temperatures well above normal this week • Update: Severe thunderstorm watch issued for Ithaca • Above - average temperatures
expected for Ithaca for early October • Why has the weather this
summer been so amazing?
But our modelling predicts that with either 1.5 ℃ or 2 ℃ of global
warming, we could
expect similarly angry
summers to occur during both El Niño and La Niña periods.
By 2050, we are
expecting hotter, drier
summers, wetter falls and springs, and
warmer winters.
As the climate of the Pacific Northwest
warms, more winter precipitation is falling as rain, compared with historical averages.2 With declining snowpack in Oregon's Cascade Mountains, peak stream flows are occurring earlier, and
summer flows are declining.2 These changes are
expected to continue as heat - trapping emissions grow, putting more stress on already endangered salmon that return to the Columbia and other rivers in the region to spawn.2
As modern temperatures are influenced in part by greenhouse gases, both
summers and winters are
expected to
warm, whereas past temperatures in those seasons had opposing trajectories, Baker said.
According to the scientists, a smaller wave already occurred during the hot
summer of 2010 and, though unprecedented, we can
expect it to occur again if the climate continues to
warm and melt the ice.
Considering that there were places in the Arctic this
summer that were 7 to 10C
warmer than average this past winter, while some of us in the eastern and southern US froze our tails off — we got a very unusual freeze in S. Texas — due to the strongly negative arctic oscillation (weather patterns go north to south instead of west to east), and considering that the data gaps are more in the Arctic and inaccessible places, not here, one would
expect GISS to come up with a somewhat
warmer average than Hadley & others this year.
As I might have said before, in IPPC - speak it would be «Although we can not give significance to such a short period of time (14 years), this lack of
warming is exactly what we would
expect if there were to be a 30 year hiatus» I look forward to next spring / early
summer when the first two temperature records cross the 15 year mark of slight cooling.
Second, this general prediction «'' internal variability leading to slower than
expected warming in recent years through 2010, followed by accelerated
warming «'' is almost exactly the same prediction that the Hadley Center made last
summer in Science (see here).
If the
warming was being caused by anything related to the Sun then we would
expect to see more
warming when the Sun is shining - during the day and in
summer.
This is particularly true in the
warmer months, which is why we
expect to see a spike in motorcycle accidents throughout the
summer.