Ocean model resolution dependence of Caribbean sea-level projections

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作者
René M. van Westen
Henk A. Dijkstra
Carine G. van der Boog
Caroline A. Katsman
Rebecca K. James
Tjeerd J. Bouma
Olga Kleptsova
Roland Klees
Riccardo E. M. Riva
D. Cornelis Slobbe
Marcel Zijlema
Julie D. Pietrzak
机构
[1] Utrecht University,Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research
[2] Delft University of Technology,Department of Hydraulic Engineering, Civil Engineering and Geosciences
[3] Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research and Utrecht University,Estuarine and Delta Systems
[4] Delft University of Technology,Department of Geoscience and Remote Sensing, Civil Engineering and Geosciences NL
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Sea-level rise poses severe threats to coastal and low-lying regions around the world, by exacerbating coastal erosion and flooding. Adequate sea-level projections over the next decades are important for both decision making and for the development of successful adaptation strategies in these coastal and low-lying regions to climate change. Ocean components of climate models used in the most recent sea-level projections do not explicitly resolve ocean mesoscale processes. Only a few effects of these mesoscale processes are represented in these models, which leads to errors in the simulated properties of the ocean circulation that affect sea-level projections. Using the Caribbean Sea as an example region, we demonstrate a strong dependence of future sea-level change on ocean model resolution in simulations with a global climate model. The results indicate that, at least for the Caribbean Sea, adequate regional projections of sea-level change can only be obtained with ocean models which capture mesoscale processes.
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