Changes in Future Precipitation Mean and Variability across Scales

Author:

Schwarzwald Kevin1,Poppick Andrew2,Rugenstein Maria3,Bloch-Johnson Jonah4,Wang Jiali5,McInerney David6,Moyer Elisabeth J.71

Affiliation:

1. a Center for Robust Decision-Making on Climate and Energy Policy, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

2. b Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota

3. c Department of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

4. d National Centre for Atmospheric Science, University of Reading, Reading, England

5. e Environmental Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, Illinois

6. f Department of Civil, Environmental and Mining Engineering, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

7. g Department of Geophysical Sciences, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Abstract

AbstractChanges in precipitation variability can have large societal consequences, whether at the short time scales of flash floods or the longer time scales of multiyear droughts. Recent studies have suggested that in future climate projections, precipitation variability rises more steeply than does its mean, leading to concerns about societal impacts. This work evaluates changes in mean precipitation over a broad range of spatial and temporal scales using a range of models from high-resolution regional simulations to millennial-scale global simulations. Results show that changes depend on the scale of aggregation and involve strong regional differences. On local scales that resolve individual rainfall events (hours and tens of kilometers), changes in precipitation distributions are complex and variances rise substantially more than means, as is required given the well-known disproportionate rise in precipitation intensity. On scales that aggregate across many events, distributional changes become simpler and variability changes smaller. At regional scale, future precipitation distributions can be largely reproduced by a simple transformation of present-day precipitation involving a multiplicative shift and a small additive term. The “extra” broadening is negatively correlated with changes in mean precipitation: in strongly “wetting” areas, distributions broaden less than expected from a simple multiplicative mean change; in “drying” areas, distributions narrow less. Precipitation variability changes are therefore of especial concern in the subtropics, which tend to dry under climate change. Outside the tropics, variability changes are similar on time scales from days to decades (i.e., show little frequency dependence). This behavior is highly robust across models, suggesting it may stem from some fundamental constraint.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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