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Spatiotemporal Differences in Dominants of Dryness/Wetness Changes in Southwest China

Authors :
Shanlei Sun
Wanrong Shi
Shujia Zhou
Jinjian Li
Guojie Wang
Weiping Lou
Jiazhi Wang
Source :
Advances in Meteorology, Vol 2019 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2019.

Abstract

A full analysis of 3-month Standardized Precipitation-Evapotranspiration index (SPEI-3) changes and attribution analyses are of significance for deeply understanding dryness/wetness evolutions and thus formulating specific measures to sustain regional development. In this study, we analyze monthly and annual SPEI-3 changes over Southwest China (SWC; including Sichuan (SC), Chongqing (CQ), Guizhou (GZ), Yunnan (YN), and west Guangxi (wGX)) during 1961–2012, using the SPEI model and routine meteorological measurements at 269 weather sites. For SWC and each subregion (excluding wGX), annual SPEI-3 during 1961–2012 tends to decrease, and drying is at most of months in January and September–December, but wetting is in February–August (excluding March for wGX). Additionally, more than 50% of sites show declined and increased SPEI-3 in January, April, June, and August–December and the remaining months, respectively. Except for wGX with dominant of ET0, annual SPEI-3 changes in SWC and other four subregions have dominant of precipitation. Spatially, annual SPEI-3 changes at 59% of sites are because of precipitation, generally located in southeast SC, south YN, CQ, GZ, and south and northeast wGX. Nevertheless, dominants at regional and site scales vary among months, e.g., SWC, SC, CQ, and GZ, having dominant of precipitation (ET0) during September–December (most of months during January–August), YN always with dominant of precipitation, and wGX with dominant of precipitation (ET0) in February–April and July–December (January, May, and June). Importantly, this study provides a reference for quantitatively evaluating spatiotemporal dryness/wetness variations with climate change, especially for regions with significant drying/wetting.

Details

ISSN :
16879317 and 16879309
Volume :
2019
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in Meteorology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d9a029b8581f827c1692e41d0a79af79
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/2820769