Evaluating climate change at the Croatian Adriatic from observations and regional climate models’ simulations
The 2m temperature (T2m) and precipitation from five regional climate models (RCMs), which participated in the ENSEMBLES project and were integrated at a 25-km horizontal resolution, are compared with observed climatological data from 13 stations located in the Croatian coastal zone. The twentieth c...
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description | The 2m temperature (T2m) and precipitation from five regional climate models (RCMs), which participated in the ENSEMBLES project and were integrated at a 25-km horizontal resolution, are compared with observed climatological data from 13 stations located in the Croatian coastal zone. The twentieth century climate was simulated by forcing RCMs with identical boundary conditions from the ERA-40 reanalysis and the ECHAM5/MPI-OM global climate model (GCM); climate change in the twenty-first century is based on the A1B scenario and assessed from the GCM-forced RCMs’ integrations. When forced by ERA-40, most RCMs exhibit cold bias in winter which contributes to an overestimation of the T2m annual cycle amplitude and the errors in interannual variability are in all RCMs smaller than those in the climatological mean. All models underestimate observed warming trends in the period 1951–2010. The largest precipitation biases coincide with locations/seasons with small observed amounts but large precipitation amounts near high orography are relatively well reproduced. When forced by the same GCM all RCMs exhibit a warming in the cold half-year and a cooling (or weak warming) in the warm period, implying a strong impact of GCM boundary forcing. The future eastern Adriatic climate is characterised by a warming, up to +5 °C towards the end of the twenty-first century; for precipitation, no clear signal is evident in the first half of the twenty-first century, but a reduction in precipitation during summer prevails in the second half. It is argued that land-sea contrast and complex coastal configuration of the Croatian coast, i.e. multitude of island and well indented coastline, have a major impact on small-scale variability. Orography plays important role only at small number of coastal locations. We hypothesise that the parameterisations related to land surface processes and soil hydrology have relatively stronger impact on variability than orography at those locations that include a relatively large fraction of land (most coastal stations), but affecting less strongly locations at the Adriatic islands. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s00382-012-1646-z |
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The twentieth century climate was simulated by forcing RCMs with identical boundary conditions from the ERA-40 reanalysis and the ECHAM5/MPI-OM global climate model (GCM); climate change in the twenty-first century is based on the A1B scenario and assessed from the GCM-forced RCMs’ integrations. When forced by ERA-40, most RCMs exhibit cold bias in winter which contributes to an overestimation of the T2m annual cycle amplitude and the errors in interannual variability are in all RCMs smaller than those in the climatological mean. All models underestimate observed warming trends in the period 1951–2010. The largest precipitation biases coincide with locations/seasons with small observed amounts but large precipitation amounts near high orography are relatively well reproduced. When forced by the same GCM all RCMs exhibit a warming in the cold half-year and a cooling (or weak warming) in the warm period, implying a strong impact of GCM boundary forcing. The future eastern Adriatic climate is characterised by a warming, up to +5 °C towards the end of the twenty-first century; for precipitation, no clear signal is evident in the first half of the twenty-first century, but a reduction in precipitation during summer prevails in the second half. It is argued that land-sea contrast and complex coastal configuration of the Croatian coast, i.e. multitude of island and well indented coastline, have a major impact on small-scale variability. Orography plays important role only at small number of coastal locations. We hypothesise that the parameterisations related to land surface processes and soil hydrology have relatively stronger impact on variability than orography at those locations that include a relatively large fraction of land (most coastal stations), but affecting less strongly locations at the Adriatic islands.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0930-7575</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1432-0894</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1007/s00382-012-1646-z</identifier><identifier>CODEN: CLDYEM</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg</publisher><subject>Atmospheric circulation ; Atmospheric models ; Boundary conditions ; Climate change ; Climate models ; Climatic changes ; Climatology ; Climatology. Bioclimatology. 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The twentieth century climate was simulated by forcing RCMs with identical boundary conditions from the ERA-40 reanalysis and the ECHAM5/MPI-OM global climate model (GCM); climate change in the twenty-first century is based on the A1B scenario and assessed from the GCM-forced RCMs’ integrations. When forced by ERA-40, most RCMs exhibit cold bias in winter which contributes to an overestimation of the T2m annual cycle amplitude and the errors in interannual variability are in all RCMs smaller than those in the climatological mean. All models underestimate observed warming trends in the period 1951–2010. The largest precipitation biases coincide with locations/seasons with small observed amounts but large precipitation amounts near high orography are relatively well reproduced. When forced by the same GCM all RCMs exhibit a warming in the cold half-year and a cooling (or weak warming) in the warm period, implying a strong impact of GCM boundary forcing. The future eastern Adriatic climate is characterised by a warming, up to +5 °C towards the end of the twenty-first century; for precipitation, no clear signal is evident in the first half of the twenty-first century, but a reduction in precipitation during summer prevails in the second half. It is argued that land-sea contrast and complex coastal configuration of the Croatian coast, i.e. multitude of island and well indented coastline, have a major impact on small-scale variability. Orography plays important role only at small number of coastal locations. We hypothesise that the parameterisations related to land surface processes and soil hydrology have relatively stronger impact on variability than orography at those locations that include a relatively large fraction of land (most coastal stations), but affecting less strongly locations at the Adriatic islands.</description><subject>Atmospheric circulation</subject><subject>Atmospheric models</subject><subject>Boundary conditions</subject><subject>Climate change</subject><subject>Climate models</subject><subject>Climatic changes</subject><subject>Climatology</subject><subject>Climatology. Bioclimatology. Climate change</subject><subject>Coastal zone</subject><subject>Earth and Environmental Science</subject><subject>Earth Sciences</subject><subject>Earth, ocean, space</subject><subject>Environmental aspects</subject><subject>Exact sciences and technology</subject><subject>External geophysics</subject><subject>Geophysics/Geodesy</subject><subject>Global climate</subject><subject>Hydrology</subject><subject>Meteorology</subject><subject>Oceanography</subject><subject>Orography</subject><subject>Soil hydrology</subject><subject>Temperature</subject><issn>0930-7575</issn><issn>1432-0894</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2013</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>BENPR</sourceid><recordid>eNp1kt9qFTEQxhdR8Fh9AO8CotSLbSfZ7L_Lw6FqoSBYvQ452cmeLdlNTbJFe9XX8PV8Eue4pfQIkoskM79vYD6-LHvN4YQD1KcRoGhEDlzkvJJVfvskW3FZUKVp5dNsBW0BeV3W5fPsRYxXAFxWtVhl_uxGu1mnYeqZccOoEzKz01OPTCeWdsg2wVNbT2zdhYFehtngR-a3EcMN_f0UmZ46FrCnt3YPY0bfoYu_736xOIyzW9CX2TOrXcRX9_dR9u3D2dfNp_zi88fzzfoiN7IpUm67rpTASwOia3ELpgNpS4uiMQ1UuDVNaVvRgi6MtbQWWM7rtm4QtzVC0RZH2fEy9zr47zPGpMYhGnROT-jnqLgsm7LgUDWEvvkHvfJzoE32lKwEOVUJok4WqtcO1TBZn4I2dDocB-MntAPV10UpKvIdJAneHwiISfgj9XqOUZ1ffjlk3z1id6hd2kXv5r-WHYJ8AU3wMQa06jqQ2-Gn4qD2QVBLEBQFQe2DoG5J8_Z-Px2NdjboyQzxQSjqlktR1cSJhYvUogCERz78d_gfEsfDHw</recordid><startdate>20131101</startdate><enddate>20131101</enddate><creator>BRANKOVIC, Cedo</creator><creator>GÜTTLER, Ivan</creator><creator>GAJIC-CAPKA, Marjana</creator><general>Springer Berlin Heidelberg</general><general>Springer</general><general>Springer Nature B.V</general><scope>IQODW</scope><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>ISR</scope><scope>3V.</scope><scope>7TG</scope><scope>7TN</scope><scope>7UA</scope><scope>7XB</scope><scope>88F</scope><scope>88I</scope><scope>8FK</scope><scope>ABUWG</scope><scope>AEUYN</scope><scope>AFKRA</scope><scope>ATCPS</scope><scope>AZQEC</scope><scope>BENPR</scope><scope>BHPHI</scope><scope>BKSAR</scope><scope>C1K</scope><scope>CCPQU</scope><scope>DWQXO</scope><scope>F1W</scope><scope>GNUQQ</scope><scope>H96</scope><scope>HCIFZ</scope><scope>KL.</scope><scope>L.G</scope><scope>M1Q</scope><scope>M2P</scope><scope>PATMY</scope><scope>PCBAR</scope><scope>PQEST</scope><scope>PQQKQ</scope><scope>PQUKI</scope><scope>PYCSY</scope><scope>Q9U</scope><scope>7ST</scope><scope>7TV</scope><scope>7U6</scope></search><sort><creationdate>20131101</creationdate><title>Evaluating climate change at the Croatian Adriatic from observations and regional climate models’ simulations</title><author>BRANKOVIC, Cedo ; GÜTTLER, Ivan ; GAJIC-CAPKA, Marjana</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c483t-fdd54015c02d9eb0cd04f5fe28c806ebc85f9290a3cff7570f117978eeb7e0393</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2013</creationdate><topic>Atmospheric circulation</topic><topic>Atmospheric models</topic><topic>Boundary conditions</topic><topic>Climate change</topic><topic>Climate models</topic><topic>Climatic changes</topic><topic>Climatology</topic><topic>Climatology. 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The twentieth century climate was simulated by forcing RCMs with identical boundary conditions from the ERA-40 reanalysis and the ECHAM5/MPI-OM global climate model (GCM); climate change in the twenty-first century is based on the A1B scenario and assessed from the GCM-forced RCMs’ integrations. When forced by ERA-40, most RCMs exhibit cold bias in winter which contributes to an overestimation of the T2m annual cycle amplitude and the errors in interannual variability are in all RCMs smaller than those in the climatological mean. All models underestimate observed warming trends in the period 1951–2010. The largest precipitation biases coincide with locations/seasons with small observed amounts but large precipitation amounts near high orography are relatively well reproduced. When forced by the same GCM all RCMs exhibit a warming in the cold half-year and a cooling (or weak warming) in the warm period, implying a strong impact of GCM boundary forcing. The future eastern Adriatic climate is characterised by a warming, up to +5 °C towards the end of the twenty-first century; for precipitation, no clear signal is evident in the first half of the twenty-first century, but a reduction in precipitation during summer prevails in the second half. It is argued that land-sea contrast and complex coastal configuration of the Croatian coast, i.e. multitude of island and well indented coastline, have a major impact on small-scale variability. Orography plays important role only at small number of coastal locations. We hypothesise that the parameterisations related to land surface processes and soil hydrology have relatively stronger impact on variability than orography at those locations that include a relatively large fraction of land (most coastal stations), but affecting less strongly locations at the Adriatic islands.</abstract><cop>Berlin/Heidelberg</cop><pub>Springer Berlin Heidelberg</pub><doi>10.1007/s00382-012-1646-z</doi><tpages>21</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Atmospheric circulation Atmospheric models Boundary conditions Climate change Climate models Climatic changes Climatology Climatology. Bioclimatology. Climate change Coastal zone Earth and Environmental Science Earth Sciences Earth, ocean, space Environmental aspects Exact sciences and technology External geophysics Geophysics/Geodesy Global climate Hydrology Meteorology Oceanography Orography Soil hydrology Temperature |
title | Evaluating climate change at the Croatian Adriatic from observations and regional climate models’ simulations |
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