Regional climate model downscaling of the U.S. summer climate and future change

被引:121
|
作者
Liang, Xin-Zhong
Pan, Jianping
Zhu, Jinhong
Kunkel, Kenneth E.
Wang, Julian X. L.
Dai, Aiguo
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, Illinois State Water Survey, Champaign, IL 61820 USA
[2] NOAA, Air Resources Lab, Silver Spring, MD 20910 USA
[3] Natl Ctr Atmospher Res, Boulder, CO 80307 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1029/2005JD006685
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
A mesoscale model (MM5)-based regional climate model (CMM5) integration driven by the Parallel Climate Model (PCM), a fully coupled atmosphere-ocean-land-ice general circulation model (GCM), for the present (1986-1995) summer season climate is first compared with observations to study the CMM5's downscaling skill and uncertainty over the United States. The results indicate that the CMM5, with its finer resolution ( 30 km) and more comprehensive physics, simulates the present U. S. climate more accurately than the driving PCM, especially for precipitation, including summer mean patterns, diurnal cycles, and daily frequency distributions. Hence the CMM5 downscaling provides a credible means to improve GCM climate simulations. A parallel CMM5 integration driven by the PCM future (2041-2050) projection is then analyzed to determine the downscaling impact on regional climate changes. It is shown that the CMM5 generates climate change patterns very different from those predicted by the driving PCM. A key difference is a summer "warming hole" over the central United States in the CMM5 relative to the PCM. This study shows that the CMM5 downscaling can significantly reduce GCM biases in simulating the present climate and that this improvement has important consequences for future projections of regional climate changes. For both the present and future climate simulations, the CMM5 results are sensitive to the cumulus parameterization, with strong regional dependence. The deficiency in representing convection is likely the major reason for the PCM's unrealistic simulation of U. S. precipitation patterns and perhaps also for its large warming in the central United States.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Senators urge U.S. to return to climate change talks
    Issues Sci Technol, 2006, 2 (20-21):
  • [22] Global Climate Change: Why U.S. Insurers Care
    Franklin W. Nutter
    Climatic Change, 1999, 42 : 45 - 49
  • [23] Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Productivity of U.S. Dairies
    Key, Nigel
    Sneeringer, Stacy
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2014, 96 (04) : 1136 - 1156
  • [25] Climate change impacts on U.S. Coastal and Marine Ecosystems
    Donald Scavia
    John C. Field
    Donald F. Boesch
    Robert W. Buddemeier
    Virginia Burkett
    Daniel R. Cayan
    Michael Fogarty
    Mark A. Harwell
    Robert W. Howarth
    Curt Mason
    Denise J. Reed
    Thomas C. Royer
    Asbury H. Sallenger
    James G. Titus
    Estuaries, 2002, 25 : 149 - 164
  • [26] Future Temperature-Related Deaths in the U.S.: The Impact of Climate Change, Demographics, and Adaptation
    Lee, Jangho
    Dessler, Andrew E.
    GEOHEALTH, 2023, 7 (08):
  • [27] Projecting Water Withdrawal and Supply for Future Decades in the U.S. under Climate Change Scenarios
    Roy, Sujoy B.
    Chen, Limin
    Girvetz, Evan H.
    Maurer, Edwin P.
    Mills, William B.
    Grieb, Thomas M.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2012, 46 (05) : 2545 - 2556
  • [28] Regional climate models downscaling analysis of general circulation models present climate biases propagation into future change projections
    Liang, Xin-Zhong
    Kunkel, Kenneth E.
    Meehl, Gerald A.
    Jones, Richard G.
    Wang, Julian X. L.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2008, 35 (08)
  • [29] Evaluation of regional climate model simulated rainfall over Indonesia and its application for downscaling future climate projections
    Chandrasa, Ganesha T.
    Montenegro, Alvaro
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2020, 40 (04) : 2026 - 2047
  • [30] Projections of future climate for U.S. national assessments: past, present, future
    Samantha Basile
    Allison Crimmins
    Fredric Lipschultz
    Kenneth E. Kunkel
    Kate Marvel
    Adam Terando
    Claudia Tebaldi
    David Pierce
    Wenying Su
    L. Ruby Leung
    Katharine Hayhoe
    Climatic Change, 2025, 178 (4)