Abstract
AbstractSea level variability increasingly contributes to coastal flooding and erosion as global sea levels rise, partly due to the thermal expansion of seawater, which accelerates with increasing temperature. Climate model simulations with increasing greenhouse gas emissions suggest that future sea level variability, such as the annual and interannual oscillations that alter local astronomical tidal cycles and contribute to coastal impacts, will also increase in many regions. Here, we present an analysis of the CMIP5 climate model projections of future sea level to show that there is a tendency for a near-global increase in sea level variability with continued warming that is robust across models, regardless of whether ocean temperature variability increases. Specifically, for an upper-ocean warming by 2 °C, which is likely to be reached by the end of this century, sea level variability increases by 4 to 10% globally on seasonal-to-interannual timescales because of the nonlinear thermal expansion of seawater. As the oceans continue to warm, future ocean temperature oscillations will cause increasingly larger buoyancy-related sea level fluctuations that may alter coastal risks.
Funder
United States Department of Commerce | NOAA | Climate Program Office
National Science Foundation
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Reference49 articles.
1. Nerem, R. S. et al. Climate-change–driven accelerated sea-level rise detected in the altimeter era. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 115, 2022–2025 (2018).
2. Wigley, T. M. L. & Raper, S. C. B. Thermal expansion of sea water associated with global warming. Nature 330, 127–131 (1987).
3. Fasullo, J. T. & Gent, P. R. On the relationship between regional ocean heat content and sea surface height. J. Clim. 30, 9195–9211 (2017).
4. Griffies, S. M. et al. An assessment of global and regional sea level for years 1993–2007 in a suite of interannual CORE-II simulations. Ocean Model. 78, 35–89 (2014).
5. Bindoff, N. L., Cheung, W. W. L. & Kairo, J. G. in The Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (ed Brad Seibel Manuel Barange) Ch. 5, 198 (IPCC, in press).
Cited by
56 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献