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Analysis of precipitation extremes related to agriculture and water resources sectors based on gridded daily data in Romania.

Authors :
Horvath, Csaba
Croitoru, Adina-Eliza
Source :
Theoretical & Applied Climatology. Jan2023, Vol. 151 Issue 1/2, p355-373. 19p. 1 Chart, 1 Graph, 7 Maps.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Climate change is one of the most frequent topics in climatic literature over the last three decades. One of the significant concerns with a potential change in climate is that extreme events will occur with a higher frequency. This paper focuses on spatial distribution and changes that occurred in extreme precipitation indices in Romania over a 53-yr period: 1961–2013. Gridded daily precipitation data have been used at a spatial resolution of 0.1° × 0.1° (about 11 km × 11 km). A set of 14 indices established by the Expert Team for Sector-Specific Indices for agriculture and water resources sectors has been calculated. They are both frequency and intensity indices: four are fixed threshold indices (R10, R20, CDD, and CWD), four are station-related thresholds (R95p, R99p, R95pTOT, R99pTOT), and six indices were detected without using a threshold (Rx1day, Rx3days, PRECPTOT, SDII, SPI, SPEI). The study's main finding is that most of the indices registered increasing trends but not statistically significant at the country level. The only exceptions are the drought-related indices (CDD, SPI, and SPEI), for which we found a dominant decreasing trend. In the northern half of the country, increasing trends were prevailing, and in the southern one, those decreasing registered a broader spatial coverage. SPI and SPEI recorded mainly significant changes: SPI trends are almost equally divided between increasing and decreasing. For SPEI, more than 70% of the country was characterized by a significant decrease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0177798X
Volume :
151
Issue :
1/2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Theoretical & Applied Climatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161235367
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00704-022-04271-6