Atlantic tropical cyclones downscaled from climate reanalyses show increasing activity over past 150 years

Historical records of Atlantic hurricane activity, extending back to 1851, show increasing activity over time, but much or all of this trend has been attributed to lack of observations in the early portion of the record. Here we use a tropical cyclone downscaling model driven by three global climate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2021-12, Vol.12 (1), p.7027-7027, Article 7027
1. Verfasser: Emanuel, Kerry
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Historical records of Atlantic hurricane activity, extending back to 1851, show increasing activity over time, but much or all of this trend has been attributed to lack of observations in the early portion of the record. Here we use a tropical cyclone downscaling model driven by three global climate analyses that are based mostly on sea surface temperature and surface pressure data. The results support earlier statistically-based inferences that storms were undercounted in the 19 th century, but in contrast to earlier work, show increasing tropical cyclone activity through the period, interrupted by a prominent hurricane drought in the 1970s and 80 s that we attribute to anthropogenic aerosols. In agreement with earlier work, we show that most of the variability of North Atlantic tropical cyclone activity over the last century was directly related to regional rather than global climate change. Most metrics of tropical cyclones downscaled over all the tropics show weak and/or insignificant trends over the last century, illustrating the special nature of North Atlantic tropical cyclone climatology. If the frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones have changed over the last century, it is not well known, given the lack of reliable data before the mid-20th century. Here, the author uses a statistical-dynamical model to show an increase in tropical cyclone activity in the Atlantic since the 19th century.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-021-27364-8