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Downscaling extreme month-long anomalies in southern South America

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2010
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Menéndez, C. G.
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Downscaling extreme month-long anomalies in southern South America
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Author
  • Menéndez, C. G.;
  • Castro, M. de;
  • Boulanger, J.- P.;
  • D’Onofrio, A.;
  • Sánchez, E.;
  • Sörensson, A. A.;
  • Blazquez, J.;
  • Elizalde, A.;
  • Jacob, D.;
  • Le Treut, H.;
  • Li, Z. X.;
  • Núñez, M. N.;
  • Pessacg, N.;
  • Pfeiffer, S.;
  • Rojas, M.;
  • Rolla, A.;
  • Samuelsson, P.;
  • Solman, S. A.;
  • Teichmann, C.;
Abstract
We investigate the performance of one stretched-grid atmospheric global model, five different regional climate models and a statistical downscaling technique in simulating 3 months (January 1971, November 1986, July 1996) characterized by anomalous climate conditions in the southern La Plata Basin. Models were driven by reanalysis (ERA-40). The analysis has emphasized on the simulation of the precipitation over land and has provided a quantification of the biases of and scatter between the different regional simulations.Most but not all dynamical models underpredict precipitation amounts in south eastern South America during the three periods. Results suggest that models have regime dependence, performing better for some conditions than others. The models’ ensemble and the statistical technique succeed in reproducing the overall observed frequency of daily precipitation for all periods. But most models tend to underestimate the frequency of dry days and overestimate the amount of light rainfall days. The number of events with strong or heavy precipitation tends to be under simulated by the models.
Patrocinador
We wish to thank the European Commission 6th Framework programme for funding the CLARIS Project (Project 001454). The three periods were selected by Olga Penalba and Matilde Rusticucci (DCAO, FCEN, Universidad de Buenos Aires) in the framework of CLARIS WP3.2. This work was begun while C.G. Menéndez visited the Facultad de Ciencias del Medio Ambiente in Toledo (Spain), invited by the Universidad de Castilla-LaMancha. The ECOS A04U02 and PIP/CONICET 5416 projects also supported this work. Constructive comments from two anonymous reviewers are greatly appreciated.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125368
DOI: DOI 10.1007/s10584-009-9739-3
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Climatic Change (2010) 98:379–403
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