Affiliation:
1. Laboratoire d’Océanographie Physique et Spatiale Univ Brest CNRS IRD Ifremer Brest France
2. Division of Environmental Science and Engineering Pohang University of Science and Technology Pohang South Korea
Abstract
AbstractThis study investigates the contribution of external forcings on global and regional ocean wave height change during 1961–2020. Historical significant wave height (Hs) produced for different CMIP6 external forcings and preindustrial control conditions following the Detection and Attribution Model Intercomparison Project (DAMIP) are employed. The internal variability ranges are compared with different external forcing scenario. Statistically significant linear trends in Hs computed over regional ocean basins are found to be mostly associated with anthropogenic forcings: greenhouse gas‐only (GHG) and aerosol‐only (AER) forcing. For Hs, GHG signals are robustly detected and dominant for most of the global ocean, except over North pacific and South Atlantic, where AER signals are dominant. These results are supported by multi‐model analysis for wind speed. The remarkable increase in Hs over the Arctic (22.3%) and Southern (8.2%) Ocean can be attributed to GHG induced sea‐ice depletion and larger effective fetch along with wind speed increase.
Funder
Institut Français de Recherche pour l'Exploitation de la Mer
Korea Institute of Marine Science and Technology promotion
Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)