Projected future daily characteristics of African precipitation based on global (CMIP5, CMIP6) and regional (CORDEX, CORDEX-CORE) climate models

被引:0
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作者
Alessandro Dosio
Martin W. Jury
Mansour Almazroui
Moetasim Ashfaq
Ismaila Diallo
Francois A. Engelbrecht
Nana A. B. Klutse
Christopher Lennard
Izidine Pinto
Mouhamadou B. Sylla
Alain T. Tamoffo
机构
[1] European Commission,Earth Sciences Department
[2] Joint Research Centre (JRC),Wegener Center for Climate and GlobalChange
[3] BarcelonaSupercomputing Center (BSC-CNS),Center of Excellence for Climate Change Research/Department of Meteorology
[4] University of Graz,Climatic Research Unit, School of Environmental Sciences
[5] King Abdulaziz University,Computational Sciences and Engineering Division
[6] University of East Anglia,Department of Geography
[7] Oak Ridge National Laboratory,Global Change Institute
[8] University of California Los Angeles,Department of Physics
[9] University of the Witwatersrand,Laboratory for Environmental Modelling and Atmospheric Physics (LEMAP), Department of Physics
[10] African Institute for Mathematical Sciences (AIMS),undefined
[11] University of Ghana,undefined
[12] University of Cape Town (UCT),undefined
[13] University of Yaoundé 1,undefined
来源
Climate Dynamics | 2021年 / 57卷
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摘要
We provide an assessment of future daily characteristics of African precipitation by explicitly comparing the results of large ensembles of global (CMIP5, CMIP6) and regional (CORDEX, CORE) climate models, specifically highlighting the similarities and inconsistencies between them. Results for seasonal mean precipitation are not always consistent amongst ensembles: in particular, global models tend to project a wetter future compared to regional models, especially over the Eastern Sahel, Central and East Africa. However, results for other precipitation characteristics are more consistent. In general, all ensembles project an increase in maximum precipitation intensity during the wet season over all regions and emission scenarios (except the West Sahel for CORE) and a decrease in precipitation frequency (under the Representative Concentration Pathways RCP8.5) especially over the West Sahel, the Atlas region, southern central Africa, East Africa and southern Africa. Depending on the season, the length of dry spells is projected to increase consistently by all ensembles and for most (if not all) models over southern Africa, the Ethiopian highlands and the Atlas region. Discrepancies exist between global and regional models on the projected change in precipitation characteristics over specific regions and seasons. For instance, over the Eastern Sahel in July–August most global models show an increase in precipitation frequency but regional models project a robust decrease. Global and regional models also project an opposite sign in the change of the length of dry spells. CORE results show a marked drying over the regions affected by the West Africa monsoon throughout the year, accompanied by a decrease in mean precipitation intensity between May and July that is not present in the other ensembles. This enhanced drying may be related to specific physical mechanisms that are better resolved by the higher resolution models and highlights the importance of a process-based evaluation of the mechanisms controlling precipitation over the region.
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页码:3135 / 3158
页数:23
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