Winter weather regimes over the Mediterranean region: their role for the regional climate and projected changes in the twenty-first century
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Rojas, M.
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Winter weather regimes over the Mediterranean region: their role for the regional climate and projected changes in the twenty-first century
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Abstract
The winter time weather variability over the
Mediterranean is studied in relation to the prevailing
weather regimes (WRs) over the region. Using daily geopotential
heights at 700 hPa from the ECMWF ERA40
Reanalysis Project and Cluster Analysis, four WRs are
identified, in increasing order of frequency of occurrence,
as cyclonic (22.0 %), zonal (24.8 %), meridional (25.2 %)
and anticyclonic (28.0 %). The surface climate, cloud
distribution and radiation patterns associated with these
winter WRs are deduced from satellite (ISCCP) and other
observational (E-OBS, ERA40) datasets. The LMDz
atmosphere–ocean regional climate model is able to simulate
successfully the same four Mediterranean weather
regimes and reproduce the associated surface and atmospheric
conditions for the present climate (1961–1990).
Both observational- and LMDz-based computations show
that the four Mediterranean weather regimes control the
region’s weather and climate conditions during winter,
exhibiting significant differences between them as for
temperature, precipitation, cloudiness and radiation distributions
within the region. Projections (2021–2050) of the
winter Mediterranean weather and climate are obtained
using the LMDz model and analysed in relation to the
simulated changes in the four WRs. According to the SRES
A1B emission scenario, a significant warming (between 2
and 4 C) is projected to occur in the region, along with a
precipitation decrease by 10–20 % in southern Europe,
Mediterranean Sea and North Africa, against a 10 % precipitation
increase in northern European areas. The projected
changes in temperature and precipitation in the
Mediterranean are explained by the model-predicted
changes in the frequency of occurrence as well as in the
intra-seasonal variability of the regional weather regimes.
The anticyclonic configuration is projected to become more
recurrent, contributing to the decreased precipitation over
most of the basin, while the cyclonic and zonal ones
become more sporadic, resulting in more days with below
normal precipitation over most of the basin, and on the
eastern part of the region, respectively. The changes in
frequency and intra-seasonal variability highlights the
usefulness of dynamics versus statistical downscaling
techniques for climate change studies.
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Clim Dyn (2013) 41:551–571
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