On regional dynamical downscaling for the assessment and projection of temperature and precipitation extremes across Tasmania, Australia
The ability of an ensemble of six GCMs, downscaled to a 0.1° lat/lon grid using the Conformal Cubic Atmospheric Model over Tasmania, Australia, to simulate observed extreme temperature and precipitation climatologies and statewide trends is assessed for 1961–2009 using a suite of extreme indices. Th...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Climate dynamics 2013-12, Vol.41 (11-12), p.3145-3165 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The ability of an ensemble of six GCMs, downscaled to a 0.1° lat/lon grid using the Conformal Cubic Atmospheric Model over Tasmania, Australia, to simulate observed extreme temperature and precipitation climatologies and statewide trends is assessed for 1961–2009 using a suite of extreme indices. The downscaled simulations have high skill in reproducing extreme temperatures, with the majority of models reproducing the statewide averaged sign and magnitude of recent observed trends of increasing
warm days
and
warm nights
and decreasing
frost days.
The
warm spell duration index
is however underestimated, while variance is generally overrepresented in the
extreme temperature range
across most regions. The simulations show a lower level of skill in modelling the amplitude of the extreme precipitation indices such as
very wet days
, but simulate the observed spatial patterns and variability. In general, simulations of dry extreme precipitation indices are underestimated in dryer areas and wet extremes indices are underestimated in wetter areas. Using two SRES emissions scenarios, the simulations indicate a significant increase in
warm nights
compared to a slightly more moderate increase in
warm days
, and an increase in
maximum
1- and 5-
day precipitation
intensities interspersed with longer
consecutive dry spells
across Tasmania during the twenty-first century. |
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ISSN: | 0930-7575 1432-0894 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00382-013-1718-8 |