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Characterizing differences in precipitation regimes of extreme wet and dry years: implications for climate change experiments

Authors :
Michael E. Loik
Kevin R. Wilcox
Sally E. Koerner
David L. Hoover
Kimberly J. La Pierre
Melinda D. Smith
Alan K. Knapp
Yiqi Luo
Osvaldo E. Sala
Meghan L. Avolio
Source :
Global change biology, vol 21, iss 7, Knapp, AK; Hoover, DL; Wilcox, KR; Avolio, ML; Koerner, SE; La Pierre, KJ; et al.(2015). Characterizing differences in precipitation regimes of extreme wet and dry years: Implications for climate change experiments. Global Change Biology, 21(7), 2624-2633. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12888. UC Santa Cruz: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/80h16242
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2015.

Abstract

© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Climate change is intensifying the hydrologic cycle and is expected to increase the frequency of extreme wet and dry years. Beyond precipitation amount, extreme wet and dry years may differ in other ways, such as the number of precipitation events, event size, and the time between events. We assessed 1614 long-term (100 year) precipitation records from around the world to identify key attributes of precipitation regimes, besides amount, that distinguish statistically extreme wet from extreme dry years. In general, in regions where mean annual precipitation (MAP) exceeded 1000 mm, precipitation amounts in extreme wet and dry years differed from average years by ~40% and 30%, respectively. The magnitude of these deviations increased to >60% for dry years and to >150% for wet years in arid regions (MAP99th percentile of all events); these occurred twice as often in extreme wet years compared to average years. In contrast, these large precipitation events were rare in extreme dry years. Less important for distinguishing extreme wet from dry years were mean event size and frequency, or the number of dry days between events. However, extreme dry years were distinguished from average years by an increase in the number of dry days between events. These precipitation regime attributes consistently differed between extreme wet and dry years across 12 major terrestrial ecoregions from around the world, from deserts to the tropics. Thus, we recommend that climate change experiments and model simulations incorporate these differences in key precipitation regime attributes, as well as amount into treatments. This will allow experiments to more realistically simulate extreme precipitation years and more accurately assess the ecological consequences.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Global change biology, vol 21, iss 7, Knapp, AK; Hoover, DL; Wilcox, KR; Avolio, ML; Koerner, SE; La Pierre, KJ; et al.(2015). Characterizing differences in precipitation regimes of extreme wet and dry years: Implications for climate change experiments. Global Change Biology, 21(7), 2624-2633. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12888. UC Santa Cruz: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/80h16242
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0409ea57d3bb22caedeb8800229a5a6c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12888.