Anthropogenic and natural contributions to the Southeast Pacific precipitation decline and recentmegadrought in central Chile
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Boisier Echeñique, Juan Pablo
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Anthropogenic and natural contributions to the Southeast Pacific precipitation decline and recentmegadrought in central Chile
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Abstract
Within large uncertainties in the precipitation response to greenhouse gas forcing, the Southeast Pacific drying stands out as a robust signature within climate models. A precipitation decline, of consistent direction but of larger amplitude than obtained in simulations with historical climate forcing, has been observed in central Chile since the late 1970s. To attribute the causes of this trend, we analyze local rain gauge data and contrast them to a large ensemble of both fully coupled and sea surface temperature-forced simulations. We show that in concomitance with large-scale circulation changes, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation explains about half of the precipitation trend observed in central Chile. The remaining fraction is unlikely to be driven exclusively by natural phenomena but rather consistent with the simulated regional effect of anthropogenic climate change. We particularly estimate that a quarter of the rainfall deficit affecting this region since 2010 is of anthropogenic origin. An increased persistence and recurrence of droughts in central Chile emerges then as a realistic scenario under the current socioeconomic pathway.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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CONICYT (Chile) through the FONDECYT
3150492
1140637
CONICYT (Chile) through the FONDAP Research Center (CR)
2 (15110009)
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Geophysical Research Letters 43, 413–421, 2016
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