Projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States

Regional and local climate extremes, and their impacts, result from the multifaceted interplay between large-scale climate forcing, local environmental factors (physiography), and societal vulnerability. In this paper, we review historical and projected changes in temperature and precipitation extre...

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Main Authors: Justin T. Schoof, Scott M. Robeson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-03-01
Series:Weather and Climate Extremes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094715300281
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author Justin T. Schoof
Scott M. Robeson
author_facet Justin T. Schoof
Scott M. Robeson
author_sort Justin T. Schoof
collection DOAJ
description Regional and local climate extremes, and their impacts, result from the multifaceted interplay between large-scale climate forcing, local environmental factors (physiography), and societal vulnerability. In this paper, we review historical and projected changes in temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States, with a focus on strengths and weaknesses of (1) commonly used definitions for extremes such as thresholds and percentiles, (2) statistical approaches to quantifying changes in extremes, such as extreme value theory, and (3) methods for post-processing (downscaling) global climate models (GCMs) to investigate regional and local climate. We additionally derive regional and local estimates of changes in temperature extremes by applying a quantile mapping approach to high-resolution gridded daily temperature data for 6 U.S. sub-regions. Consistent with the background warming in the parent GCMs, we project decreases in regional and local cold extremes and increases in regional and local warm extremes throughout the domain, but the downscaling approach removes bias and produces substantial spatial variability within the relatively small sub-regions. We finish with recommendations for future research on regional climate extremes, suggesting that focus be placed on improving understanding of extremes in the context of large-scale circulation and evaluating the corresponding cascade of scale interactions within GCMs.
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spelling doaj.art-8fc30edc55e745038b152c36b8aaafc92022-12-21T23:42:33ZengElsevierWeather and Climate Extremes2212-09472016-03-0111C284010.1016/j.wace.2015.09.004Projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the United StatesJustin T. Schoof0Scott M. Robeson1Department of Geography and Environmental Resources, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901, USADepartment of Geography, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USARegional and local climate extremes, and their impacts, result from the multifaceted interplay between large-scale climate forcing, local environmental factors (physiography), and societal vulnerability. In this paper, we review historical and projected changes in temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States, with a focus on strengths and weaknesses of (1) commonly used definitions for extremes such as thresholds and percentiles, (2) statistical approaches to quantifying changes in extremes, such as extreme value theory, and (3) methods for post-processing (downscaling) global climate models (GCMs) to investigate regional and local climate. We additionally derive regional and local estimates of changes in temperature extremes by applying a quantile mapping approach to high-resolution gridded daily temperature data for 6 U.S. sub-regions. Consistent with the background warming in the parent GCMs, we project decreases in regional and local cold extremes and increases in regional and local warm extremes throughout the domain, but the downscaling approach removes bias and produces substantial spatial variability within the relatively small sub-regions. We finish with recommendations for future research on regional climate extremes, suggesting that focus be placed on improving understanding of extremes in the context of large-scale circulation and evaluating the corresponding cascade of scale interactions within GCMs.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094715300281ExtremesRegional climateDownscalingQuantile mapping
spellingShingle Justin T. Schoof
Scott M. Robeson
Projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States
Weather and Climate Extremes
Extremes
Regional climate
Downscaling
Quantile mapping
title Projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States
title_full Projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States
title_fullStr Projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States
title_short Projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the United States
title_sort projecting changes in regional temperature and precipitation extremes in the united states
topic Extremes
Regional climate
Downscaling
Quantile mapping
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094715300281
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