Declining tropical cyclone frequency under global warming

Assessing the role of anthropogenic warming from temporally inhomogeneous historical data in the presence of large natural variability is difficult and has caused conflicting conclusions on detection and attribution of tropical cyclone (TC) trends. Here, using a reconstructed long-term proxy of annu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature climate change 2022-07, Vol.12 (7), p.655-661
Hauptverfasser: Chand, Savin S., Walsh, Kevin J. E., Camargo, Suzana J., Kossin, James P., Tory, Kevin J., Wehner, Michael F., Chan, Johnny C. L., Klotzbach, Philip J., Dowdy, Andrew J., Bell, Samuel S., Ramsay, Hamish A., Murakami, Hiroyuki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Assessing the role of anthropogenic warming from temporally inhomogeneous historical data in the presence of large natural variability is difficult and has caused conflicting conclusions on detection and attribution of tropical cyclone (TC) trends. Here, using a reconstructed long-term proxy of annual TC numbers together with high-resolution climate model experiments, we show robust declining trends in the annual number of TCs at global and regional scales during the twentieth century. The Twentieth Century Reanalysis (20CR) dataset is used for reconstruction because, compared with other reanalyses, it assimilates only sea-level pressure fields rather than utilize all available observations in the troposphere, making it less sensitive to temporal inhomogeneities in the observations. It can also capture TC signatures from the pre-satellite era reasonably well. The declining trends found are consistent with the twentieth century weakening of the Hadley and Walker circulations, which make conditions for TC formation less favourable. Detecting change in tropical cyclones is difficult from observational records. Here a reconstruction using reanalysis data of annual cyclone numbers shows they have declined globally and regionally over the twentieth century.
ISSN:1758-678X
1758-6798
DOI:10.1038/s41558-022-01388-4