Thermal Stress in the Northern Carpathians and Air Circulation

Thermal Stress in the Northern Carpathians and Air Circulation

MISCELLANEA GEOGRAPHICA – REGIONAL STUDIES ON DEVELOPMENT Vol. 24 • No. 3 • 2020 • pp. 147-160 • ISSN: 2084-6118 • DOI: 10.2478/mgrsd-2020-0022 Thermal stress in the northern Carpathians and air circulation Abstract In mountain areas, air circulation plays a major role in the forming of Błażejczyk Krzysztof 1, Nejedlik Pavol 2, the climate. This paper examines how it influences thermal stress in the Skrynyk Oleh 3, Halaś Agnieszka 3, 4,5 1 northern Carpathians. The Niedźwiedź’s classification of air circulation Skrynyk Olesya , Baranowski Jarosław , 6 was applied. Thermal stress was assessed by Universal Thermal Climate Mikulova Katarina Index (UTCI). Daily meteorological and circulation data for the period 1Polish Academy of Sciences, Institute of Geography and 1986–2015 were used for 20 stations in Poland, Slovakia and Ukraine. Spatial Organization, Climate Impacts Laboratory, Poland, Air circulation was found to have a significant impact on thermal stress. e-mail: [email protected] The highest UTCI values are observed at Ca+Ka (centre of the high and e-mail: [email protected] anticyclonic wedge or ridge of high pressure) and the lowest values at 2Earth Science Institute of Slovak Academy of Science, Slovakia N+NE and W+NW circulation; at the Southward stations, UTCI is higher e-mail: [email protected] than in the Northward ones; thermoneutral days are more frequent on the southward than on the northward slopes; during N+NE, E+SE and W+NW 3Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies,University of Warsaw, circulation and for heat stress days, the greatest thermal privilege of the Poland southward slopes is observed at E+SE, S+SW, Ca+Ka and Cc+Bc (centre e-mail: [email protected] of low and through of low pressure) types of circulation. e-mail: [email protected] Keywords 4National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Northern Carpathians • thermal stress • UTCI • air circulation Ukraine, Ukraine 5Ukrainian Hydrometeorological Institute, Ukraine e-mail: [email protected] 6Slovak Hydrometeorological Institute, Slovakia e-mail: [email protected] Received: 30 March 2020 © University of Warsaw – Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies Accepted: 29 June 2020 Introduction Thermal stress caused by meteorological conditions with the influence of air circulation on bioclimatic conditions. Ono can influence different kinds of human activity, for example and Kawamura (1991) assessed heat discomfort in southern Asia in performance of work outdoors, sport, tourism, preventative relation to summer and winter monsoons. Kolendowicz et al. (2018) healthcare, etc. Mountain regions are areas that are very studied distribution of UTCI at southern Baltic and Nowosad et al. sensitive to atmospheric factors and climate change (Migała 2005). (2013) – in eastern Poland (Lublin) in relation to air circulation. The The general features of the climate and its vertical zonation are latest research conducted by Owczarek et al. (2019) describes the very important due to their elevation above sea level (Błażejczyk et impacts of Grosswetterlagen weather types on UTCI distribution al.; 2013, Smith 2015; Rubel et al. 2017; Bokwa et al. 2019). Local weather in northern Poland. Błażejczyk and Skrynyk (2019) applied the is also influenced by exposure to predominant winds, depending Niedźwiedź classification in Chornohora. on regional and local circulation patterns (Niedźwiedź 1983, 2012). In mountain areas, climate features depend both on general Within the large number of biometeorological indices that regional factors and on vertical zonation of all meteorological have been proposed for assessing bioclimatic conditions (Epstein variables: temperature, precipitation, cloudiness, insolation, etc. & Moran 2006; Błażejczyk et al. 2012; de Freitas & Grigorieva 2017) the (Trepińska 2002; Migała 2005; Twardosz 1999, 2007; Baranowski 1999, newly developed Universal Thermal Climate Index (UTCI), which 2003; Niedźwiedź 2003; Żmudzka 2009, 2011; Messeri et al. 2015; Sindosi defines thermal stress in humans, is more and more frequently et al. 2015; Łupikasza & Niedźwiedź 2016; Błażejczyk 2019; Żmudzka & applied in bioclimatic research (Morabito et al 2014; Urban & Kysely Kulesza 2019). The important factors that have a major effect on 2014; Kolendowicz et al. 2018). the mountain climate are geographical position and orientation of General climate and synoptic classifications are frequently the mountain ridges (Smith 2015). At elevated locations, lower air used to explain how different air masses influence meteorological temperature and higher wind speeds cause that the human body elements (temperature, wind, solar radiation, precipitation, etc.) is exposed to greater thermal stress. In addition, in the mountains, (e.g. Lityński 1970; Kalkstein & Nicholls 1996; Bissolli & Dittmann 2001; atmospheric conditions affecting humans can significantly differ Sheridan 2002; Niedźwiedź 2003; Bower et al. 2007; Huth et al. 2008; Vallorani over a relatively short horizontal distance (Błażejczyk et al. 2013; et al 2017). Within COST Action 733, European researchers have Bokwa et al. 2019). Until now there have not been many papers conducted a review and harmonization of different synoptic presenting the biometeorological specificity of mountain areas classifications (e.g.Huth et al. 2008). There is some research dealing (Gaijć-Čapka & Zaninović 1997; Mateeva & Filipov 2003; Zaninović et al. 2006; 147 MISCELLANEA GEOGRAPHICA – REGIONAL STUDIES ON DEVELOPMENT Vol. 24 • No. 3 • 2020 • pp. 147-160 • ISSN: 2084-6118 • DOI: 10.2478/mgrsd-2020-0022 Figure 1. Northern Carpathians – location of meteorological stations used in research; the extent of the northern Carpathians is marked in the red rectangle. Source: produced by author Miszuk 2008; Endler et al. 2010; Milewski 2013; Pecelj et al. 2017; Bokwa et eastern (exposed to N, NE and E advections) and south-western al. 2019). slopes of the Carpathian arc (open to air flows from W, SW and For the Carpathian region, there are also complex climatic S). characteristics (Konček 1974; Niedźwiedź 2012; Cheval et al. 2014; The Carpathians are a wide, crescent-shaped mountain Spinoni et al. 2014; Dąbrowska & Guzik eds. 2015). The general features ridge located in Central and Eastern Europe. They are the of thermal stress conditions in the northern Carpathians were third longest mountain system in Europe (after the Urals and analysed by Błażejczyk et al. (2020), who concluded that 1) due Scandinavian Mountains) extending for approximately 1300 to the higher altitude, UTCI values became lower, cold stress km from the Danube gorge near Bratislava to the Iron Gate – days are more frequent, and the number of heat stress days the Danube gorge near Orshova. The Carpathians consist of is reduced and at sites elevated >1500 m ASL is equal to 0, 2) many geologically and orographically distinct mountain ridges in eastern areas with sub-mountain, coline relief, cold stress is (Rączkowska et al. 2012). The highest part of the mountains is more evident and heat stress days are more frequent than in the the Tatra Massif (characterized by typical alpine relief), which western, montane landscape, 3) on the southward slopes of the consists of more than 50 peaks with an elevation above 2000 Carpathian arc, heat stress is greater and more frequent then in m (the culmination is Gerlachovský štít, 2 655 m ASL). In the north-facing areas. Eastern Carpathians, Chornohora is the highest ridge, with six This study is designed to examine how air circulation peaks >2000 m (Hoverla 2 061 m ASL). affects the spatial differentiation of thermal stress in the northern In the Carpathian Mountains, several vertical climate zones Carpathians. Attention is paid to exposure of meteorological were distinguished by Hess (1965), namely: moderately warm stations to predominant flows of air. (<700 m ASL), moderately cool (700–1100 m ASL), cool (1100– 1550 m ASL), very cool (1550–1850 m ASL), moderately cold Materials and methods (1850–2200 m ASL), and cold (>2200 m ASL). For the Eastern To analyse thermal stress in the Carpathians, we have Carpathians, Niedźwiedź (2012) has proposed modified borders of used daily meteorological data from 20 stations of national those zones, in respective order for those zones: 850, 850–1200, weather networks of Poland, Ukraine and Slovakia for the 1200–1550, 1550–1850 and 1850–2100 m ASL (there is no cold period 1986-2015 (Fig. 1). For Poland, data are available at: belt). Instytut Meteorologii i Gospodarki Wodnej Państwowy Instytut The Carpathian vertical climate zones correspond to zones Badawczy 2020. Ukrainian and Slovak data were made available observed in the European Alps. Rubel et al (2017) have applied the by archives of the Ukrainian Hydrometeorological Institute and Koppen-Geiger climate classification to those zones, as follows: Slovak Hydrometeorological Institute. In general, Polish stations <1050 m ASL – Cfb climate (coline belt), 1050-1390 m ASL – represent the northward slopes of the Carpathian arc (opened Cfc/Dfb climate (montane belt), 1390-1880 m ASL – Dfc climate to advections of air from N, NW and NE) and Slovak stations (subalpine belt), 1880-3250 m ASL – ET climate (alpine belt). represent the southward slopes (influenced by air advection from Taking into account orographic, geological, and climatic facts S and SE). Ukrainian stations are located both on the north- discussed by Błażejczyk et al (2020) and the nomenclature proposed 148 MISCELLANEA GEOGRAPHICA – REGIONAL STUDIES ON DEVELOPMENT

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